Tag: atiku

  • You can’t influence North against Tinubu, Alawuje tells Atiku, Obi

    You can’t influence North against Tinubu, Alawuje tells Atiku, Obi

    As political momentum builds toward the 2027 general elections, Comrade Abdulhakeem Adegoke Alawuje, founder of the Disciples of Jagaban (DOJ) and a key figure in the Tinubu Support Movement, has declared that “Atiku Abubakar and Peter Obi have neither the influence nor the credibility to turn the North against President Bola Ahmed Tinubu.”

    In a strongly worded statement, Alawuje cautioned politicians “engaging in underground ethnic and religious politics,” insisting that every move is being closely monitored.

    “Be warned. There is no political or ethnic scheme you can execute without the awareness of our agents. The North will not be deceived again,” he said.

    Recalling Tinubu’s pivotal role in the 2015 elections, Alawuje said history will not forget how the then–APC National Leader “stood firmly with the North when it mattered most.”

    “At that crucial moment, Tinubu traversed the region, convincing millions who once opposed Buhari to support him. The North has not forgotten that selfless act,” he stated.

    He described the North as “a region of loyalty and honour,” stressing that it would “reward Tinubu with its votes again in 2027.”

    The Tinubu loyalist accused Atiku of masking a “Northern agenda” while alleging that Peter Obi was “hiding behind religious sentiments.”

    Read Also: Atiku, Pitobi and their hero

    “Both are playing hypocritical politics of the highest order. No propaganda will turn the North against its trusted ally from the Southwest,” he declared.

    Citing recent remarks by the Emir of Kano, His Royal Highness Muhammad Sanusi II, who noted that “Nigeria has pulled back from the brink of economic collapse,” Alawuje commended President Tinubu’s “bold and transformative reforms.”

    “Tinubu is performing exceptionally well—transforming Nigeria’s economic and developmental landscape. Nigerians only need patience,” he added.

    Praising the President’s resilience amid criticism, Alawuje said Tinubu’s governance had silenced detractors.

    “Despite social media ‘economists’ sowing fear, Tinubu has proven them wrong. He is a courageous and visionary leader—an economic reformer and a true champion of human development,” he said.

    Alawuje urged Nigerians to support Tinubu’s ongoing reforms and resist divisive politics, saying, “President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has made us proud. He has laid a solid foundation for Nigeria’s future.”

  • Atiku, Pitobi and their hero

    Atiku, Pitobi and their hero

    I wonder why Pitobi and Atiku are not saying anything today about their darling economist in Argentina. Remember not long ago, they made the Argentine President Javier Milei their hero. He is the rightwing fellow who would not float the currency, but decided to change the economy without the proper pills. Well, he is in trouble.

    He is now on his knees to President Donald Trump to help him or he will lose the election next time.

     The U.S. President decided to gift him with $20 billion just to keep the peso alive and pay some of the bills. The interest rates are high and inflation is roiling. Job reports are not flattering. That is what the fellows Pitobi and Atiku wanted to do here.

    READ ALSO: Over $50bn in Crypto transactions passed through Nigeria in one year-SEC

    President Milei is a coward because he cannot do what President Tinubu has done. That is, to float the currency and face the inevitable headwinds head on. As they say, you can’t make omelettte without breaking an egg. He does not want the consequences of wise daring. He is not ready for the challenges of leadership, just like his cheerleaders on our soil.

  • Shettima, Atiku, Kwankwaso, others commiserate with Jack-Rich over uncle

    Shettima, Atiku, Kwankwaso, others commiserate with Jack-Rich over uncle

    Vice President Kashim Shettima has expressed condolences to President of Belemaoil Group, Tein Jack-Rich over the death of his uncle, Dr. Harrison Tiger.

    Shettima, who led tributes for the late Tiger, described Jack-Rich as a friend and a good man devoted to serving humanity.

    Other dignitaries who paid condolence visits include former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, Moroccan Ambassador Moha Ouali Tagma, Emir of Borgu Kingdom Dr. Muhammed Sani Dantoro, former Governors Rabiu Kwankwaso and Attahiru Bafarawa, business mogul Alhaji Dahiru Mangal, and former Minister Dr. Emeka Nwajiuba. 

    The leadership of Arewa 100% Focus, a prominent northern youth group, also visited, underscoring Jack-Rich’s widespread respect and admiration.

    “I’m here to commiserate with Jack-Rich over the sad demise of his uncle. May God grant the family the fortitude to bear this irreparable loss,” Shettima said, highlighting Jack-Rich’s philanthropic efforts in drilling boreholes and empowering communities. 

    “He is a bridge builder who deserves to be celebrated,” the vice president added. 

    As the Sarkin Ruwan Hausawa, Jack-Rich is admired for his compassion, humility, and dedication to humanity. 

    His philanthropic efforts in education, healthcare, and empowerment have transformed countless lives.

    Jack-Rich expressed gratitude to Vice President Shettima and President Bola Tinubu for their condolences. 

    He said: “I want to thank Mr. President for sending the Vice President to condole the family on account of the demise of my uncle, who was like a father. And also thanking the Vice President, my great friend, for coming despite his busy schedule.”

    In a statement, Jack-Rich thanked everyone for support, saying, “Today is a great outcome, not just for me, but also for the greater good of believers in the movement of our party. 

    “I want to thank the ambassadors for coming, thank all the well-meaning Nigerians, thank my former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar, Kwakwanso and other great Nigerians and lovers of peace, and lovers of the good of this country.”

    Renowned leaders have lauded Jack-Rich as a paragon of unity and generosity, a man whose bridge-building spirit and deep sense of service reflect the true essence of Nigeria’s diversity.

  • Wait till 2031 for your turn, Guru Maharaj Ji tells Atiku, others

    Wait till 2031 for your turn, Guru Maharaj Ji tells Atiku, others

    The founder of One Love Family, Sat Guru Maharaj Ji, has advised former Vice President Atiku Abubakar and other northern politicians to abandon their 2027 presidential ambitions and allow President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to complete his eight-year tenure.

    In a statement on Wednesday, Maharaj Ji said Atiku’s persistent quest for the presidency has become excessive, describing it as “a car without brakes.” 

    He added that the former vice president’s desperation has made him deaf to the voices of reason.

    He called on political leaders from the North, particularly members of the Northern Elders Forum (NEF), to intervene and persuade Atiku to shelve his ambition in the interest of national peace and equity.

    “The silence of Northern leaders, especially the NEF members like Generals Ibrahim Babangida, Yakubu Gowon, Abdulsalami Abubakar, and David Mark, as well as Northern youths and traders, amounts to encouraging political rascality,” Maharaj Ji said.

    READ ALSO: CBN, finance ministry present Nigeria’s economic progress at G24 meetings

    He warned that allowing Atiku to contest in 2027 would amount to an attempt to “rob the South of its rightful eight-year tenure,” which began in 2023 under President Tinubu.

    “It is either Atiku is stopped from contesting in 2027 or the 2031 presidential election should be open to all regions,” he added.

    Maharaj Ji maintained that the South must be allowed to complete its two-term cycle, just as the North did under former President Muhammadu Buhari.

    “What is good for the goose is good for the gander,” he stated, urging Northern leaders to apply the same level of support they gave Buhari in ensuring Tinubu’s administration completes its tenure for the sake of peace, progress, and stability.

    “I reiterate that Atiku has no business aiming to contest the forthcoming 2027 presidential election! He does not have the love that creates intelligence, dignity, and respect for such a position.

    “And if he insists he does, he will be taught a special lesson by The Light Forces that have saved Nigeria from being set ablaze by the Atikus, Ndume Babachin, David Mark, El Rufais, Kwankwaso, Modu Sheriffs of Boko Haram, Miyetti Allah, etc., and their trainee religious sycophants and stealocrats like Aregbe, Amaechi, Tanbulwal.”

  • Igbo group slams Atiku, Sowore over proposed Free Nnamdi Kanu’s protest

    Igbo group slams Atiku, Sowore over proposed Free Nnamdi Kanu’s protest

    A group of Igbo businessmen in the United States has raised the alarm the Free Nnamdi Kanu Now protest planned for October 20 is a ploy by the presidential candidates in the 2023 elections, Omoyele Sowore and Atiku Abubakar to delay Kanu’s ongoing trial. 

    Atiku, who was the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) presidential candidate in the last general election publicly backed the planned protest, the brainchild of Sowore, the African Action Congress (AAC) presidential candidate in the election. 

    In a statement, the group said it was worried by the activities of what it described as the “rhethoric by self-serving politicians who lost relevance at the polls and now want to use the plight of our dearly beloved brother, Nnamdi Kanu, to score cheap political points.”

    The statement, under the aegis “Njiko Amaka” and signed by Chiefs Emeka Ejidike, and Okey Anosike, chairman and secretary respectively, warned that the planned protest had the capacity to scuttle Kanu’s trial. 

    According to the group: “We have watched with concern the activities of Sowore on the ongoing trial of our brother, Nnamdi Kanu. As if that isn’t worrying enough, Atiku Abubakar, who has never organized nor joined any protest to free his violence-ravaged region, has joined Sowore. 

    “Ndigbo have a wise saying about a tortoise that spent years in a dung pit. On the day of his release, Mr. Tortoise began to holler for his captors to quickly set him free, forgetting that he’d spent years in the pit. 

    Read Also: Ekiti 2026: Atiku meets ADC gov aspirant, mobilises support for party

    “This aptly captures the condition we found ourselves with our brother, Nnamdi Kanu. He spent years in detention without trial. Now that the prosecution has shown genuine commitment to speed up his trial, this is the wrongest of times to do anything that might jeopardize the trial,” noted the group. 

    “The question well-meaning Nigerians should ask Sowore is why his sudden interest in leading a protest for Kanu at  the same time he is facing criminal charges for calling President Bola Tinubu an unprintable name? 

    “Another question well-meaning Nigerians should ask Atiku Abubakar why he is more interested in Nnamdi Kanu when his ‘brother’ Mohammed Usman aka Khalid al-Barnawi, who masterminded the 2011 bombing of the UN building in Abuja, has been in detention since April 2016? 

    “Atiku is from the North. So is al-Barnawi. Why Atiku left out al-Barnawi, who had been in detention since 2016, and jumped on the case of Nnamdi Kanu, who was re-arrested in June 2021, is best known to him. All we know is that only evil motives drive a man to cry more than the bereaved.

    “We advise all well-meaning Nigerians to see through the self-serving antics of Sowore and Atiku who do not wish Nnamdi Kanu and definitely, Ndigbo, well, to avoid them like a plague. 

    “We are happy that Ndigbo are not in short supply of worthy torchbearers who can plead the cause of Ndigbo. We have five governors, 15 senators,  and scores of Representatives. Even today, Governor Peter Mbah assured that a political solution was being worked out on Kanu. We do not want fifth columnists to scuttle this.”

  • Ekiti 2026: Atiku meets ADC gov aspirant, mobilises support for party

    Ekiti 2026: Atiku meets ADC gov aspirant, mobilises support for party

    Former Vice President and presidential aspirant on the platform of the African Democratic Congress (ADC), Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, has called on the people of Ekiti State to support the party ahead of the June 20, 2026 governorship poll.

    Atiku said the ADC was ready to rescue Ekiti people from the shackles of alleged maladministration, saying the party has what it takes to transform the state and put it on the path of greatness and prosperity.

    The former Vice President spoke while receiving a frontline ADC governorship aspirant, Prince Adeyinka Alli  in  his residence in Abuja ahead of the 2026 governorship election in Ekiti State.

    The ADC chieftain expressed confidence in Alli’s leadership capacity, describing him as a vibrant and determined young politician capable of giving Ekiti a new direction.

    Atiku who commended  Alli’s courage, vision, and track record in public service and humanitarian work, describing him as a refreshing face in Ekiti politics.

    He explained that his decision to meet the governorship hopeful was influenced by his credentials and commitment to humanitarian services, which he said align with the ADC’s vision for  reform and inclusive governance.

    Atiku said, “Ekiti has gotten a new face, ADC is a party that practices transitional politics. I’m encouraging young people, women, to come in because ADC is the young bride in town.

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    “Alli is the first person I’m meeting that wants to contest for any political office in Ekiti under ADC. I saw your CV and it’s very okay, that’s why I said I want to see you.

    “You did well; I like your boldness and determination. I have other appointments with international personnel, but I have to suspend that to attend to you and I believe that with you, Ekiti is safe in your hands under ADC,” he added.

    Alli, who had declared his ambition at his country home of Itapa-Ekiti, Oye Local Government Area of the state, said he has the capacity to transform the state.

    “Through transparency, accountability, and technology-driven governance, we will build a government that listens, serves, and delivers. This is the promise of Progress Together, a government of the people, by the people, and for the people.

    “My dear people of Ekiti, this journey is not mine alone; it is ours. It is the dream of every mother who prays for her child’s future, every farmer who tills the soil with hope, and every young person who dares to believe in a brighter tomorrow. Let us rise together to write a new chapter for our beloved state,” he said.

  • You lack morality to pontificate on ex-minister Nnaji, Onoh upbraids Atiku

    You lack morality to pontificate on ex-minister Nnaji, Onoh upbraids Atiku

    The former southeast spokesman to President Bola Tinubu, Denge. Josef Onoh has told former vice President Atiku Abubakar his commentary on the resigned minister for Innovation Science and Technology, Chief Uche Nnaji was a hypothetical outburst lacing in morality.

    Atiku had condemned the Federal Government over the certificate forgery allegation against Nnaji, saying that what should have been a national shame was disguised as voluntary resig­nation.

    Onoh in a statement in Abuja said Atiku’s statement was a tirade against President Tinubu and his administration, adding that Atiku exhibits desperate political ploy and grotesque display of hypocrisy.

    He accused Atiku of an ugly past and ethical lapses that would make any true patriot recoil in disgust.

    “How dare you pontificate on moral crises, while your past reeks of scandals that have repeatedly stained Nigeria’s public trust? The audacity is breathtaking. As a private citizen with no stake in the corridors of power you invited moral burden, you lack the moral authority, nay, the basic integrity, to lecture anyone on deception or accountability. Your words are not a clarion call for justice; they are the hollow echoes of a perennial loser grasping at straws to distract from his own irrelevance.

    “Let us dissect your sanctimonious statement with the cold precision it deserves, grounded firmly in the immutable provisions of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as amended). You feign outrage over Mr. Nnaji’s voluntary resignation, claiming it masks a national shame and that he should have been summarily dismissed and prosecuted, yet, you conveniently ignore that President Tinubu’s swift acceptance of the resignation barely 72 hours after credible investigative reports surfaced, demonstrates precisely the accountability you pretend to champion,” Onoh admonished.

    He stated that under Section 147(1) of the Constitution, the President has the unfettered discretion to appoint and remove ministers at his pleasure, subject only to Senate confirmation for appointments,, which placed no constitutional bar against resignation as a dignified exit.

    He said that the President’s action aligns with the ethical imperatives of public service outlined in the Fifth Schedule, Part I (Code of Conduct for Public Officers), which emphasizes integrity and avoidance of conflicts that erode public confidence.

    He stressed that Nnaji’s prompt exit, prompted by a thorough media investigation, revealing discrepancies in his University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN) degree and NYSC certificate, upholds the public service code which the University of Nigeria confirmed that Nnaji never graduated, and NYSC disavowed his discharge certificate—facts that triggered his resignation on October 7, 2025, without the need for protracted drama.

    “You demand prosecution? Fine, let the wheels of justice turn. The Criminal Code Act (applicable in southern Nigeria, including Enugu where Mr. Nnaji hails from) under Sections 465-467 criminalizes forgery of official documents, punishable by up to 14 years imprisonment. The Penal Code (northern equivalent) mirrors this in Sections 362-366. Additionally, the Fifth Schedule, Part I, Paragraph 11 mandates asset and credential declarations, with breaches constituting ‘misconduct’ under Paragraph 3(d), including false declaration of assets and liabilities.

    Read Also: UPDATED: Council of state backs Tinubu’s nominee, Prof. Amupitan as INEC chairman

    “If investigations by the EFCC or ICPC—agencies you once undermined—uncover intent, prosecution will follow, as it should for any public officer. But your selective amnesia is telling: Where was this zeal when your own allies forged paths through similar shadows? President Tinubu’s administration has not condoned forgery as state policy. It has enforced accountability, unlike the Obasanjo era you helped orchestrate, where scandals festered under your watch.

    “Now, to the heart of your hypocrisy: You smear President Tinubu as a man of questionable identity and alleged forgery, dredging up the Chicago State University (CSU) saga as if it were unresolved. The facts bury you here. In October 2023, following a U.S. court order you yourself petitioned for, CSU released President Tinubu’s full academic records, confirming he enrolled in August 1977, majored in Accounting, and graduated with a Bachelor of Science in June 1979.

    “The university’s registrar, Caleb Westberg, deposed under oath that the replacement certificate Tinubu submitted to INEC matches CSU’s 1979 format, as verified against seven contemporaneous diplomas. Section 131(1)(d) of the Constitution requires presidential candidates to be educated up to at least School Certificate level or its equivalent—a threshold Tinubu not only meets but exceeds, as affirmed by CSU’s official transcripts and the Supreme Court’s dismissal of your petition in October 2023.

    “Your contradictory claims under oath are fiction; the records show consistency in identity (Bola A. Tinubu) and attendance. The U.S. Supreme Court denied your appeal in 2024, closing this chapter. To persist is not advocacy—it’s defamation, prosecutable under Section 375 of the Criminal Code for false statements calculated to injure reputation.

    “But oh, Atiku, the mirror you shatter reflects your own fractured visage far more cruelly. You, who accuse others of institutionalizing falsehood, stand as a monument to corruption that the Constitution abhors. Recall the Fifth Schedule, Part I, Paragraph 2: “A public officer shall not put himself in a position where his personal interest conflicts with his duties. You embodied this breach repeatedly. In 2006, as Vice President, a Senate ad-hoc committee indicted you for diverting over $145 million from PTDF funds to private interests, recommending prosecution—a grave violation of Paragraph 3(c) on bribery and corruption.

    “The EFCC, under Nuhu Ribadu, declared you unfit for public office, echoing the Code of Conduct Tribunal’s mandate under Paragraph 18(1) to punish such “misconduct” with dismissal or bans. You fled to Dubai, only returning when political winds shifted.

    “Fast-forward to 2010: A U.S. Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations report exposed how your wife, Jennifer Douglas, laundered over $40 million in suspect funds into U.S. banks during your VP tenure—funds traced to Nigerian public coffers.

    “This implicated you in money laundering, contravening Section 15(1) of the Money Laundering (Prohibition) Act and the Constitution’s anti-corruption ethos in Section 15(5). You were even linked to a bribery scandal that imprisoned U.S. Congressman William Jefferson, per the same report.

    “Your 2023 presidential bid unearthed more rot: Whistleblower Michael Achimugu’s recordings revealed you boasting of siphoning N100 million from the Ecological Fund Office via Special Purpose Vehicles (SPVs) like Marine Float Limited—classic embezzlement under Section 308 of the Penal Code. HEDA petitioned the EFCC and CCB for probe; Festus Keyamo sued you at the Federal High Court (FHC/ABJ/CS/84/2023) to compel investigation. Even your son-in-law, Abdullahi Babalele, dodged money laundering charges in 2020 for funneling $140,000 to influence elections—echoes of your playbook. And let’s not forget the 1984 suitcases scandal: As Customs Area Comptroller, you waved through 53 undeclared suitcases of cash at Murtala Muhammed Airport, a blatant breach of fiduciary duty under the Code of Conduct.

    “These are not whispers; they are documented indictments, Atiku. The Constitution’s Fifth Schedule, Paragraph 12, requires allegations of such breaches to go to the Code of Conduct Bureau—yet you evaded scrutiny time and again, shielded by political patronage. You call for an independent investigation into the FEC’s credentials, starting with Tinubu? Pot, meet kettle. The DSS’s clearance of nominees, including Nnaji, is a procedural lapse we own and have corrected—but your demand reeks of sabotage, not sincerity. Section 146(b) allows the President to fill vacancies swiftly; Tinubu has, appointing a substantive replacement without delay. Your pattern of sour grapes— from 2007 (when EFCC barred you) to 2023 (when you lost fairly)—exposes this as electioneering theater, not statesmanship.

    “Nigerians see through you, Atiku. While President Tinubu builds on his verified credentials to steer Nigeria toward renewed hope, you peddle division from the sidelines. Retract your baseless smears, or better yet, submit yourself to the EFCC for the probes you dodged. Only then might your voice on morality ring less like a forgery itself. The Constitution demands better—from all of us. It starts with silencing hypocrites and statesman turned salesman like you,” Onoh berated.

  • Atiku’s Janus-faced politics

    Atiku’s Janus-faced politics

    Apart from loving to sell dummies to his audiences everywhere, former vice president Atiku Abubakar also likes to dissemble. In the months ahead, he will be badgered by questions on the 2027 presidential elections. Speaking in an interview with BBC Hausa last week, he insisted he would not leave the newly adopted coalition party, the African Democratic Congress (ADC), for any other party should he be defeated in the coming presidential primary. He has jumped ship many times in the past, but at 79 next year, when the primary will be conducted, no one expects him to go anywhere again if he loses the primary. He will stay put. What they cannot confidently say is whether he would also remain committed should someone else be nominated for the 2027 presidential race.

    When he gave the BBC Hausa the controversial interview, the media initially reported him as saying that his ultimate wish was to ensure that his new party had a solid footing to engage in the coming electoral battle rather than the primacy of his candidacy. But the traditional media accurately reported Alhaji Atiku’s words in the proper context. He was not ambiguous about his intention to contest the next election, said the press, only that he would remain loyal and committed to the party in the event of a younger fellow taking the nomination. He appeared to have carefully rehearsed his answers this time before engaging the BBC Hausa, a firm departure from the ambiguities of the past when his spokesmen engaged in brickbats over his words and their intended meanings.

    However, it is still obvious that the former vice president is selling a dummy to the nation. When he spoke about the theoretical possibility of a younger politician defeating him in the nomination race next year, he knew it was practically impossible. No politician in the ADC with any interest in the presidency can muster his reach and resources, let alone square up to him or defeat him in the fight for the nomination. He is yet to announce his membership of the party, of course, but so, too, are the other likely contenders for the ticket: Peter Obi, a former Anambra State governor, and to a little extent Rotimi Amaechi, the overhyped former Rivers State governor. Those are the only younger elements in the party, and neither of them is capable of taking on Alhaji Atiku. While it appears guaranteed that the former vice president will soon announce his membership of the ADC, Mr Obi may still continue to pussyfoot for a little longer.

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    Indeed, what agitates the public is not that Alhaji Atiku is besotted to selling dummies; they are upset by his frequent doublespeak and his general disdain for altruism. It is true he mentioned and even praised his role in joining hands with others to build the ADC to a solid and enviable level, but that seeming selflessness proceeded only from his confidence in having cornered, if not outrightly embody, the soul of the party. In the interview, he spoke fondly and glowingly of how the party had been finally structured at the national level, and of how it was being structured at the local levels. Without saying it, his financial muscle had begun to speak, take and occupy territories for him.

    It is instructive that the same former vice president who denounced a certain Prof Ola Olateju for imbuing him with the altruism of being more concerned with building the party than advancing his presidential interest has suddenly begun to make a song and dance of his efforts to build the party or even step aside should he lose the nomination. More ‘inspiringly’ he even spoke about mentoring a younger candidate should such a person win the nomination. As this column reflected on Alhaji Atiku’s vacillations in the September 21 edition of this newspaper, there is nothing solemn or sacred about the former vice president’s words or positions.

    Here is how Barometer put it on September 21: “In late August, speaking through his representative Ola Olateju, a professor, Alhaji Atiku declared that he was not as desperate to be president as he was in midwifing a new and prosperous Nigeria. The genial professor spoke on behalf of the former vice president at a ceremony in Lagos while welcoming defectors into the African Democratic Congress (ADC), the special purpose vehicle the coalition of opposition forces plan to use to unseat President Tinubu. The ink had not dried on that ascription of altruism before Alhaji Atiku denounced the ascription and self-immolated…Another of the former vice president’s spokesmen, Tunde Olusunle, issued a swift rebuttal on facebook a day or two later, insisting that his principal would vie for the presidency in 2027. Quoting Alhaji Atiku, Dr Olusunle posted: ‘I did not issue that statement. When people stand in for me at events, we preview my thoughts on the instant subject and what my contribution or intervention will be, so that we are on the same page. In this particular instance, there was no engagement with me to distill my thoughts. Prof. Olateju was not speaking for me. I will run in 2027.’”

    Make no mistake about it, Alhaji Atiku is determined to vie for the party’s nomination, and to win, and to contest the 2027 poll. But whether he acknowledges it or not, he ran his last real race in 2023. His fellow party men will bring unbearable pressure on him to abandon the race and to restrict himself to revelling only in the joy of unseating their archenemy, President Bola Tinubu. But the former vice president would be repudiating all he stands for and who he really is by succumbing to those illicit pressures. His world revolves around him; nothing else will satisfy.

  • Atiku, Jonathan and 2027 (2)

    Atiku, Jonathan and 2027 (2)

    For the second time within a month, former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar has strongly, even vehemently, affirmed his determination to contest the 2027 presidential election and that he has no plans to step down for any contender. It was obviously in pursuit of this ambition that the Waziri Adamawa facilitated the hostile takeover of the African Democratic Congress (ADC) by elements of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) as well as aggrieved members of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), who believe they have been marginalised in the President Bola Tinubu administration. Professor Bola Olateju of the Achievers University, Owo, Ondo State, most certainly thought he was doing the former Vice-President a favour when, at a recent event, he averred that Atiku was not desperate to contest the presidency but rather was more interested in the emergence of a capable leadership for the country.

    As the professor put it at the defection of some political figures to the ADC, “Atiku Abubakar’s plan is to build a better Nigeria, it’s not about being President; it’s about establishing a government that works for Nigerians – that’s why some of us are with him, not because Atiku must be President at all costs”. In a statement suggesting that Atiku was not keen to be associated with such altruistic motivation as suggested by the Professor, the former Vice-President’s media handlers brutally shut down Olateju ‘s submissions, stressing that he was not authorised to speak for their principal. Again, refuting what he described as misrepresentations in the media of an interview Atiku granted the Hausa Service of the BBC, his media Adviser, Paul Ibe, emphasised that the politician, who has been attempting to become President of Nigeria since 1993, has no intention to step down for any other candidate.

    Rather than planning to step down in favour of a younger candidate as reported by sections of the media, Mr Ibe explained that “What Atiku Abubakar clearly and unambiguously said was that young people, as well as other prospective aspirants, are free to enter the contest. He further stressed that if a young candidate were to emerge through a competitive primary, he would readily support such a candidate without any hesitation”. Of course, the problem is that with the current constellation of political forces within the ADC, it is unlikely that any other aspirant can emerge as the party’s Presidential flag bearer apart from Atiku. There is thus the strong possibility that the ADC may come to electoral grief in the 2027 election just as Atiku’s ambition put the PDP to the electoral sword in 2023.

    For the rotation of the presidency between the North and the South for periods of eight years each has become a cardinal article of faith among members of the political class across party demarcations. As we noted last week, apart from his alleged strong faith in the prophetic vision of some spiritual mystics that he is destined to be President, Atiku has not articulated any alternative economic policy agenda to demonstrate that he would perform better as President than the incumbent administration of President Tinubu. In any case, his former boss, President Olusegun Obasanjo, gave such a ringing and brutally unsavoury verdict on the character, competence and integrity of his former deputy in his autobiography and the wily Ota farmer has neither recanted on his savage put down of Atiku nor has he made any effort to revise and amend his condemnation of the latter as his book is still very much in circulation.

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    Former President Goodluck Jonathan’s political moves, on the other hand, appear ‘curioser and curioser’ as certain political elements, especially from the PDP, try to lure him into contesting the presidential election come 2027. Although the ebullient former First Lady, Dame Patience Jonathan, publicly stated that she would back the re-election of President Tinubu, especially given his support for Dr Jonathan in the 2011 elections, the buck stops at the former President’s desk. The ultimate decision is his. Will he leave the certainty of his widely acclaimed post-presidency role as an African and global statesman, or will he dive headlong into the rough and tumble of politics with the record of his tenure up for scrutiny once again in the turbulent, often dirty, game of politics?

    Dr Jonathan must surely be aware that the only reason he is being offered the bait of contesting for the presidency in 2027 is because it is perceived that, having been sworn in twice before, he can only spend one term of four years before power shifts back to the North. Of course, this itself is a matter of conjecture as he may face a bruising legal challenge as regards his eligibility to contest for the highest office in the land after having taken the oath of office twice before. It is unlikely that any serious party will be willing to take such a risk with the very possibility of not being able to field a candidate for the presidential election if the courts ruled against the eligibility of the former President.

    It has been reported that Dr Jonathan has been consulting with leaders in different parts of the country before taking a formal decision. Apart from meeting former military President, General Ibrahim Babangida, he also reportedly had a closed-door meeting with the Interim National Chairman of the ADC, Senator David Mark. At the latter meeting, he reportedly demanded to be presented as the consensus presidential candidate of the party, thus making party primaries unnecessary. It is not surprising that Senator David Mark is said to have turned down the request, insisting that any candidate should contest and emerge through competitive primaries. It is hardly likely that any party will grant Dr Jonathan his wish.

    But even if the PDP, for instance, indulges the former President by fielding him as a consensus candidate without primaries, there is no way he will escape scrutiny of his governance record during the campaigns for the general election. The greatest need of the hour is to have a President who will build on and consolidate the economic reforms of the Tinubu administration. Unfortunately, there is no indication that Dr Jonathan can offer such leadership. It has been claimed by some of his supporters that he would have removed the corruption-ridden fuel subsidy payments as far back as 2012 but for the vehement protests of the opposition. But that exactly is the absence of courageous leadership on the part of the former President that defined his tenure.

    Referring to Dr Jonathan’s seemingly revived ambition, the presidency, through the President’s spokesman, Mr Bayo  Onanuga, submitted that “It is his inalienable right to contest the presidency again, but any such bid would face Judicial scrutiny. The jury will determine whether Jonathan, who was sworn in twice as President, satisfies the constitutional requirements and is eligible to contest the presidency and be sworn in, if successful, for a third term in office”. Turning to the no less substantial issue of Dr Jonathan’s governance record in office as President, this newspaper reports Mr Onanuga’s statement thus, “Recounting its view of Jonathan’s tenure, the statement said the administration “engaged in frivolous spending, ran the economy aground and put the country in dire straits” claiming that key indicators declined and that “the nation’s economic downturn actually began under President Jonathan”.

    Continuing, Onanuga stated that “Some business moguls, allocated foreign exchange to import fuel, simply pocketed the dollars without importing anything and that some still face court cases”. The statement also accused Jonathan and his National Security Adviser, Col. Sambo Dasuki (rtd), of distributing security funds to “friends and cronies”. The presidency also noted that Dr Jonathan in 2010 inherited $66 billion ($46 billion in foreign reserves and $20 billion in the excess crude account (ECA) but left foreign reserves “below $30 billion” and the ECA depleted to $2 billion” by 2015 “despite generating record revenue from crude oil sales”. It also noted that oil prices averaged $100 per barrel between 2010 and 2013, yet by December 2014, “the federal government could no longer pay salaries to Federal Civil Servants” while “at least 28 states owed workers arrears”.

    Speaking sometime in 2023 at a birthday event in honour of Dr Udenta Udenta, former Governor of Ekiti State, Dr Kayode Fayemi tendered an apology to former President Jonathan over the vehement opposition to the attempt of his administration to remove fuel subsidy in 2012. Dr Fayemi was quoted as saying that “All political parties in the country agreed, and they even put it in their manifesto that the subsidy must be removed. We all said the subsidy must be removed. But we in ACN at the time, in 2013, we knew the truth, sir, but it is all politics.”.

    Responding to Fayemi ‘s claim at the time, cerebral journalist, editor and now Executive Commissioner (Operations) of the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC), Mr Louis Odion, submitted thus on an online platform, “Well, I think the issue is Fayemi ‘s volte face on the ACN stand in 2012. There is nothing to be apologetic about why the ACN opposed fuel subsidy removal in 2012. One, there was about zero safety net to protect the vulnerable then. With the ruling party more interested in splurging oil money on frivolity than and Jonathan using fuel importation license as patronage to party donors, there was no guarantee of any shelter for the poor. Subsidised petrol would then appear to be the only benefit the poor received from Nigeria. Two, Nigeria had a relatively healthy foreign reserve then, plus an excess crude account. So, the position of the ACN was in good faith and on behalf of the vulnerable population who would have been left stranded had the subsidy been removed then”.

    Louis submitted further that “But the situation in 2023 was quite different, necessitating subsidy removal. One, the APC government of Buhari had, between 2015 and 2023, laid out a comprehensive safety net in terms of a social investment programme, the most ambitious in Nigeria’s history. This included a cash register for millions of Nigerians who began to receive direct money transfer monthly, and also school feeding for pupils. Two, subsidy removal became inevitable in 2023 when Tinubu took over because, from a Nigeria that had over $46 billion foreign reserves in 2012, under Jonathan, Nigeria of 2023 had a net foreign reserves of $4 billion with over $7 billion unpaid immediate IOUs and the prospects of earning a kobo from crude oil virtually zero by June 2023…Worse, more than 90% of Nigeria’s earnings were already going into debt service. This was the choking economic climate Tinubu inherited on May 29, 2023”. Surely, there will be interesting policy and economic debates ahead should Dr Jonathan decide to contest in 2027.

  • Atiku: I won’t step down from presidential race

    Atiku: I won’t step down from presidential race

    • Ex-VP denies promising to leave contest for another aspirant

    Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has denied reports that he was ready to step down from the 2027 presidential race for another aspirant.

    In a statement by his media aide, Paul Ibe, the former Vice President insisted that such reports were based on a distortion of his recent interview with the Hausa Service of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC).

    The statement reads: “It has become necessary to clarify certain misrepresentations arising from the reportage of an interview granted by His Excellency, Atiku Abubakar, to the BBC Hausa Service by some sections of the media.

    “After a thorough review of both the video and transcripts of the interview – in the original Hausa and the English translation – it is evident that at no point did the former Vice President expressly state, suggest, or even imply that he intends to step down for anyone.

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    “What Atiku Abubakar clearly and unambiguously said was that young people, as well as other prospective presidential aspirants, are free to enter the contest.

    “He stressed that if a young candidate were to emerge through a competitive primary, he would readily support such a candidate without any hesitation.

    “While interpretative journalism is a legitimate aspect of reporting, stretching interpretation to the point of mischief is unacceptable and must not be encouraged.

    “For the records, therefore, the insinuations attributed to the Wazirin Adamawa from his BBC Hausa interview are inaccurate and do not reflect what he actually said.”