Tag: atiku

  • PDP will bounce back – Atiku

    PDP will bounce back – Atiku

    Former Vice-President, Atiku Abubakar, says the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), will bounce back to give Nigerians a responsive government.

    Abubakar said this in a statement by his Media Office in Abuja on Friday.

    “PDP is the progenitor of our contemporary democracy and shall ensure that democracy did not only survive in Nigeria, but that the country thrives through it.

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    “Being one of the founding fathers of our great party, the PDP, I take great pride in having participated in the process of nurturing the party from infancy to a deliberate agency of socio-political and economic development in Nigeria.

    “In the 16 years that the PDP was at the helm of affairs in our country, the party offered quality leadership through various administrations and the achievements recorded in those 16 years have remained the benchmark for positive growth in our economy and other critical areas of our national life.”

    Abubakar added: “I have every confidence that the PDP will bounce back to give Nigerians a responsive government.”

  • Atiku advised to stop denigrating presidency

    Atiku advised to stop denigrating presidency

    Former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar has been advised to stop attacking President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, heating up the polity and denigrating the office of the presidency.

    Rather, he was advised to wait for the outcome of the presidential election petition he filed, and stop resorting to self-help.

    A renowned socio-political activist and critic, Chief Adesunbo Onitiri, gave this advice in a statement issued in Lagos.

    According to Onitiri, Nigeria is bigger than any individual, no matter his or her status in the society.

    “Election has been held and a winner has been announced and sworn in as the President. 

    “Now that the nation is awaiting the outcome of the presidential election petition against President Tinubu, Atiku should stop insulting Nigerians’ sensitivity,” Onitiri said. 

    He noted that for some time now, Atiku had declared press war against the President, dishing out all forms of negative and malicious materials and resorting to self-help. 

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    “All these pernicious propaganda should stop and allow the people in government to concentrate on governance, very germane to the nation’s survival in the face of many security, social and economic challenges.”

    Onitiri said without defending Tinubu as a person, what Atiku had been doing since the election was held in February this year was more irritating to many Nigerians, which could no longer be tolerated.

    Onitiri was of the view that Atiku was making the duty of the Presidential Election Tribunal very difficult and indirectly attempting to sway the public opinion against what might be the outcome of the tribunal’s decision.

  • Activists knock Atiku over Chicago varsity subpoena

    Activists knock Atiku over Chicago varsity subpoena

    Activists, under the aegis of Social Rehabilitation Gruppe (SRG), have said the ongoing attempts by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) presidential candidate in this year’s general election, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, to find holes in the certificate of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, is an exercise in futility.

    In a statement yesterday, SRG’s Convener and National Coordinator, Dr. Marindoti Oludare, regretted that Atiku, “the veteran presidential candidate who unfortunately will never be president, has begun another one of his many ill-fated sojourns into the abyss of absurdity that will only lead him to being served another breakfast”.

    Oludare, a Nigerian-born U.S-based medical doctor, averred that “Atiku and his acolytes are trying to raise doubts about the certificate of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, a certificate that the issuing institution is in court defending”.

    He added: “I know you can’t teach an old dog a new trick. Perhaps, this cliché might explain why these people find it hard to fathom basic facts about simple things. President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, like many heroes of our democracy, lost a lot during the fight for democracy. One of the things he lost was his university certificate.

    “When universities print certificates, they don’t keep a duplicate copy for reissuance, should the original get lost. It is common sense that if a certificate that was issued in 1979 got reissued in 1999, the issuing faculty might have turned round their staff during this period.

    “This means that another staff of that same faculty occupying the same position as the departed official will have to endorse the reissued certificate.”

    Oludare drew an analogy, recalling that in the past few years, he had had cause to look into a reissue of his Masters of Science certificate from Texas Tech University, his alma mater.

    Read Also: President graduated in 1979, Chicago varsity replies Atiku

    The medical doctor said a direct quote from the reissue instruction page on the school’s website reads: “Diplomas are reissued in the current format, will reflect the current awarding college for the degree, and bear the signatures of current Texas Tech University and Texas Tech University System officials, no exceptions.”

    He said this meant that if the faculty had redesigned/rebranded its logo since the certificate was issued (a common practice everywhere), they would not use the old logo for the reissued certificate.

  • Knocks for Atiku over controversial tweet on Tinubu’s academic records

    Knocks for Atiku over controversial tweet on Tinubu’s academic records

    The presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the 2023 election, Atiku Abubakar, has come under fire for tackling President Bola Tinubu over the latter’s academic records at Chicago State University (CSU), United States. 

    The former vice president had recently approached a U.S. court for an order compelling Chicago State University (CSU) to release the academic records of Tinubu.

    The Nation reports CSU had replied, confirming that President Tinubu graduated from the institution in 1979.

    Tinubu’s credentials show that he graduated from CSU in 1979 with a bachelor’s degree in business administration, accounting and management. 

    Atiku via his verified twitter account on Sunday, wondered how President Tinubu attended Chicago State University without primary and secondary education.

    His tweet, however, elicited flurry of reactions.

    Many of the president’s supporters rose stoutly in defense of Tinubu. They knocked Atiku for making such comments.

    Atiku said: “I woke up this morning wondering how we got to this cul de sac. 

    “In 1999, @officialABAT claimed he attended St. John’s Primary School, Aroloya, Lagos, before proceeding to Children Home School in Ibadan. 

    “According to him, his next port of call in his educational journey was Government College Ibadan and, Richard Daley College and Chicago State University in the United States. Curiously, in 2023, Tinubu settled with attending only @ChicagoState. I am scratching my head. 

    “How is that possible? Methinks that all well-meaning Nigerians should be as confused as I am with Tinubu’s declaration that he had no primary and secondary education, yet he has a university degree. You may wish to #AskTinubu how he attained this feat so that we can learn from his ingenuity”. 

    Reacting, a commenter Musa Ahmad (@real_aahmad) said: “You’re not talking about winning the election now but Tinubu’s educational background. I don’t know how you suddenly retire from active politics to Twitter influencer”

    Another social media user, @Balogun_Jamih, said: “Just as El-Rufai retired Shehu Sani to the club of wailer and Twitter influencers. President Tinubu has successfully retired Atiku Abubakar to the club of wailer and Twitter influencers.”

    @Asakemijimi lampooned Atiku saying: “President Tinubu is really giving Atiku sleepless nights. Since when did Atiku start doing shalaye on Twitter? Sir, please try again in 2031.”

    Read Also: President graduated in 1979, Chicago varsity replies Atiku

    Another user, @chibuzo_mikel tweeted: “I said it that Atiku needs help. Losing four presidential elections can affect the mental state of the strongest man negatively.”

    @jeffphilips1 said: “Look at that tweet again and it’ll dawn on you that Tinubu, in his first go at the presidency, not just only defeated Atiku, but he actually retired him after 32yrs in the race.”

    @Egi_nupe_ tweeted: “If Atiku didn’t engage in petty and dirty politics since 2007 that he’s been contesting, I strongly doubt 2023 will make him do that. 

    “Atiku is the most classy and mature political figure we have ever seen. He doesn’t roll in the mud, and would never stoop so low, no matter what. So I don’t believe that he authorized that Tweet. Never!”

  • President graduated in 1979, Chicago varsity replies Atiku

    President graduated in 1979, Chicago varsity replies Atiku

    • ‘Why we can’t release academic records to plaintiff’

    Chicago State University (CSU) has again confirmed that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu graduated from the institution in 1979.

    It stated this in response to an application by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidate in the February 25 election, Atiku Abubakar.

    The United States District Court, Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division, on August 9, ordered the university to respond to the application.

    The case, numbered 1:23-cv-05099, is before Judge Maldonado Gilbert.

    The university, in the response sighted by our reporter yesterday, stated that it would “defer” to the “intervenor” Tinubu concerning objections to privacy and relevancy issues he raised on the application.

    It added: “Bola Tinubu, the President of Nigeria, graduated from the University in 1979. 

    “One of his political opponents, Abubakar, seeks discovery from the university of Tinubu’s student records and information about the dates and circumstances certain diplomas were issued by the university, asserting such discovery is pertinent to a Nigerian proceeding challenging Tinubu’s election earlier this year.

    “The student records Abubakar seeks from the university and the information Abubakar seeks the university to provide pursuant to a deposition subpoena concern Tinubu’s private educational records.

    “But since Tinubu has intervened to oppose this discovery, the university defers to Tinubu on the privacy issues implicated by Abubakar’s application.”

    Chigaco University said it also defers to Tinubu on whether any of the discovery information sought is appropriate under the section it was sought (28 U.S.C. §1782), including whether it is relevant to the pending Nigerian proceeding.

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    “The university struggles to understand how – given that Tinubu did in fact graduate from the university in 1979 – Tinubu’s grades and other student records from the 1970s and date and signatory information on subsequently issued ceremonial diplomas could possibly have any bearing on a 2023 election challenge in a foreign country.

    “But the university is admittedly not familiar with the issues in the Nigerian proceeding or the evidentiary and other legal principles applicable therein.

    “Accordingly, the university defers to Tinubu – who obviously is familiar with these issues and directly involved in that foreign proceeding – to advance procedural and relevancy objections to the application.”

    According to Chicago State University, in a recent conference with Atiku’s counsel about the application, it was confirmed that the evidentiary phase of the Nigerian proceeding has concluded.

    Atiku’s lawyer, the university added, had insisted that the information sought in the application might be introduced in appellate proceedings to come.

    The university urged the court, when ruling on the Atiku’s application, to scrutinise both the actual status of the Nigerian proceeding and the likelihood that any discovery information provided by the university would in fact be considered in the proceeding.

    “The university reserves objections to the scope of the discovery sought by Abubakar,” the institution stated.

    It prayed that in the event the court decides to allow any discovery to proceed, the judge should only direct “limited, targeted discovery”.

    Chicago State University added: “As leave to issue any discovery has not yet been granted, and the court’s views on what, if any, discovery is appropriate here under 28 U.S.C. §1782 are not yet known, it is premature for the university to raise objections to the scope of the documents and information sought in Abubakar’s two subpoenas.

    “But, without limiting further objections, which the university expressly reserves, the university notes that the scope and relevancy of certain of Abubakar’s requests are clearly inappropriate.

    “For example, Abubakar’s document subpoena Request No. 5 seeks information on diplomas issued by the University for a 44-year period (1979 to the present), and Abubakar’s deposition subpoena Topic No. 7 seeks information on the employment status and reasons for departure of a former employee in the University’s General Counsel’s Office.

    Read Also: Chicago Court dismisses Atiku’s suit on Tinubu’s records

    “Following this court’s ruling on the application, should any discovery be permitted, the University will meet and confer promptly and in good faith with Abubakar’s counsel to attempt to address all the university’s concerns.”

    The university’s response, dated August 23, was issued by its counsel, Michael D. Hayes, of Husch Blackwell LLP.

    The Presidential Election Tribunal had reserved judgment on Atiku’s petition challenging Tinubu’s victory.

  • Understanding Atiku’s love for blood and the mission to ruin Nigeria

     

    I have never been a fan of Atiku Abubakar for just one reason. The fact that he always tries to play smart and on the intelligence of the people by painting a holier than though image in public and the devils incarnate in private.

     

    Those that know who Atiku Abubakar is would always hesitate to have dealings with him because he or she might be on the verge of extinction. The recent statement credited to him as regards a report published by The Wall Street Journal titled “The Secret Burial of 1000 Soldiers Killed by Boko Haram/ISWAP: Nigerians Are Entitled to Know the Truth” is at best the typical Atiku Abubakar at work.

     

    One thing is obvious, and he has refused to come to terms with his electoral defeat at the general elections. While it is normal for individuals to rue a loss, but it is despicable for such individuals to hide under the cover of patriotism to fuel the seed of discord in the polity. It can be understandable of some sort if such individual is driven by passion and a commitment to the unity of the country.

     

    However, this cannot be said of Atiku Abubakar whose history is replete with acts of a disservice to the country, someone who had short-changed the country in ways too numerous to mention. I stand to be corrected, if Nigerians had fallen for the bait put forward by him and voted him as president of this country, we have been done for it.

     

    I am pained penning this article because I expect so much sober reflection from Atiku Abubakar. But the more I except some form of decency from him, the more I get disappointed with his actions and inactions. The recent unguarded statement credited to him serves as a vivid example of lack of patriotism, deception and a grand plot to cast the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari in a bad light in an attempt to instigate the people against the government.

     

    Soon after the report was published, he has gone to press without the courtesy of verifying the claims contained in the report. What does this tell us? A man that wants to by all means curries public sympathy at the detriment of the truth and the collective interest of the country. At this point, I beg to ask questions. Questions that would task the senses of well-meaning Nigerians.

     

    What point was Atiku Abubakar trying to prove with his statement? To score a cheap political point? To lend support to the foreign conspiracy against Nigeria? To appear like the saint who is without blemish? I am lost for words. I am as well pained to the extent that I weep for Nigeria and at the same time grateful to God that Nigerians were not deceived into voting for Atiku Abubakar during the last general elections.

     

    Atiku Abubakar stated that “he read the report by the Wall Street Journal that over a thousand Nigerian soldiers have been secretly buried at night by the Muhammadu Buhari led administration, to hide the true state of the war on terror, with a sense of heartbreak and shock.”

     

    The word heartbreak and shock is what I struggled to come to terms with. I was somewhat confused in the sense that someone with a despicable character could come forward to express a deceitful empathy to the families of the supposed victims as contained in the Wall Street Journal report.   The question thus is would such thing if true,  happen and go undetected by the eagle-eyed press in Nigeria and those working closely in the theatre of operations in North-East Nigeria? Your guess is as good as mine.

     

    We must learn to call a spade a spade in Nigeria if we are desirous of making progress. Nigeria, as it stands, is not a banana republic and also a free press society where there are no restrictions on press freedom. So for a foreign media organization to put forward such a false narrative is suspect and the fact that members of the opposition would hold on to it and attempt to give credence to it without objectivity is most despicable and how not to be patriotic.

     

    He further stated that “he could not fathom that in the space of a year, 1000 of these great patriots were killed and buried secretly without their families being told.” If this is not mischief, I don’t know what else to call it. Also, coming from someone who aspired to lead the country at the highest level makes it more worrisome.

     

    One thing stands clear. The fact that this is a grand conspiracy with the intent to cause disaffection in the polity. Take it or leave it, this grand deception won’t work, as Nigerians are wiser and in tune with the realities on the ground regardless of what the enemies of Nigeria plan for the disintegration of the country.

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    The said report is also questionable in the sense that there are no iota objectivity or logical reasoning in its conceptualization and delivery. As a scholar, I am trained to look at issues objectively. However, I must state in unequivocal terms that the Wall Street Journal report is indeed questionable and every discerning Nigeria must look at it carefully to see the plot.

     

    As an individual and by my training, I would put the issues raised in proper perspectives in the interest of posterity and the sensibilities of the close to 200 million Nigerians. I won’t play to the gallery to score a cheap political point. I won’t stoop so low to give credence to a foreign report that is not backed with tangibles. I would ask strategic questions that would ultimately put issues in proper perspective for the unsuspecting members of the general public.

     

    I won’t be quick to take sides. I won’t be quick to paint a gory picture based on unverifiable pieces of evidence. I must as matter of commitment think about Nigeria my country, the land of my birth. I won’t also delve into issues I am not well informed about. Also, I won’t run down my country for a plate of porridge.

     

    This is the story of Atiku Abubakar who has deployed all means to make the country ungovernable. A man that is quick to run down the efforts of the present administration towards uniting Nigerians. So a man who has vowed that Nigeria would not know peace because he lost at the general elections is not one to be taken seriously.

     

    But for how long he intends to carry on in this trend is left to be imagined as one thing stands clear. He has a mission to ensure the disintegration of Nigeria not minding whose ox is gored. This is the real national emergency that Nigerians must confront. And not the half-truths and illogical conclusions. I wonder what Atiku Abubakar stands to gain with his love for bloodshed.

     

    But I have a strong message for him. Nigeria would experience peace regardless of his nocturnal scheming and sponsorship of violence in the country. It would serve him no good now and in the years ahead. At this point, it is advised that he retraces his steps and allow peace to reign supreme in Nigeria for the journey ahead requires all hands to be on deck. A word is enough for the wise.

     

    Murphy, a security expert wrote this piece from Calabar.

  • Atiku raises alarm over alleged smear campaign

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Presidential Candidate, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, has raised the alarm on alleged plans by “unscrupulous and anti-democratic elements to contrive skirmishes in the coming weeks aimed at smearing his personality”.

    Abubakar raised the alarm in a statement issued by his Media Adviser, Mr Paul Ibe, on Friday in Abuja.

    Abubakar who was Vice President from 1999 to 2007, said that it was being revealed the grand plot orchestrated by some agents of evil to stage-manage pockets of upset targeted at attacking his reputation.

    “We wish to blow the whistle as an early warning alert of the grandiose scheme being put together by some unscrupulous elements aimed at jeopardizing the reputation of Abubakar in the coming days and weeks.

    “By the merit of what is beginning to unfold, there are plans to create some upset across the country, whereby alleged perpetrators of such crimes will engage in phantom names dropping of Abubakar and some senior personalities in the PDP.’’

    Ibe said that they were abreast of some other plans to plant fictitious stories in some mushroom media outlets aimed at discrediting Atiku and his political party, the PDP.

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    “It, therefore, becomes preponderant that we alert the public of this demonic plan and to say that it will be imprudent to compromise the peace and security of Nigerians in order to score a cheap political goal.”

    Abubakar, however, called on the Federal Government to be awake to its responsibilities of providing security and ensuring peace, and to desist from actions and utterances capable of exposing “our fault lines.”

    He said that it was unsettling that senior administration officials, would make calculated comments to tarnish the image of Abubakar and with no action from the government.

    Abubakar also demanded that the Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed tender an apology to him and the PDP.

    NAN

  • Atiku disarticulated

    Electoral Tribunal as Pandora’s Box

    The 2019 Presidential Election Tribunal is turning out to be something else. It would have been quite amusing but for its nation-disabling possibilities. This one began as a piece of wild rumour. An excellent outing of a sadistic imagination. Then it began to gain furious traction. Finally it turned out to be true.

    A major pillar of the federal authorities’ defence against the allegations by Mallam Atiku Abubakar that the last presidential poll was hopelessly rigged and serially compromised is the serious allegation that Atiku himself has rigged his nationality by claiming that he is a Nigerian whereas he is not. Since Atiku has reached for their balls, they also headed for his jugular.

    It is a major bombshell. Surely, if a man is not a Nigerian, it will be difficult for him to insist that he has been rigged out of an election of Nigerians, by Nigerians and for Nigerians. This is one of the planks of integrity of democratic rule. That is unless in the brave new world of globalization, the very idea of nationality has become a sham. It may yet be, but not so fast.

    So it is then that what began as another senseless spin from Nnamdi Kanu’s  macabre smithy of malarial concoctions has now been given full legitimation by the federal authorities.  Suffice it to say that if the allegations are to find favour with our lordships, it means that a person who has served as a major paramilitary functionary of the Nigerian state, a serial presidential contender dating back to 1993 and a vice president of the nation for a walloping eight years has become a non-Nigerian or better still an unNigerian, technically a stateless person. It doesn’t get any more fascinating.

    With a stroke of the judicial pen, Atiku would have been completely disarticulated, like an articulated lorry that has unravelled spilling its murky contents all over. Without any doubt, this presidential electoral dispute is fast turning out to be the most rancorous and ill-tempered in the history of the nation. It is electoral tribunal as a Pandora box.

    It recalls with haunting terror the brilliant judicial summarisation of the drama surrounding the deportation of Alhaji Shugaba in the Second Republic. According to the presiding judge, the unlawful deprivation of citizenship and the summary deportation is tantamount to “civil death”.

    In 1979 despite strident allegations of a stolen presidency by Chief Obafemi Awolowo’s fanatical supporters and the infamous twelve two-thirds abracadabra, the electoral tribunal of that year never strayed from the ambit of legal technicalese and jurisprudential sword-crossing.

    Forty years after, the nation is witnessing the nastiest and most polarizing presidential dispute in its electoral history. Nigeria’s luck is that this is taking place between two most favoured and influential scions of the northern establishment, northern stars of the same religion and the same ethnic extraction. Except for the fact that the leadership stakes and the order of preferment in both the north and the nation has reached a point of irreconcilable contradiction, both General Buhari and Alhaji Atiku ought to know what is really at stake and begin to act with wisdom.

    It speaks to a fundamental rupture in the northern leadership structure and an even more fundamental flaw in the British colonial nation-making that has witnessed appalling suffering and misery brought upon natives on the Indian sub-continent and the African continent in the last three hundred years.

    It is a known fact that Atiku’s parents, from Sokoto and present-day Jigawa State, journeyed to settle in Jada. It was an open migratory field which has seen criss-crossing and nomadic restlessness all over West Africa. It was a borderless space. The only border recognized then was the border of civility and good neighbourliness.

    There is no problem querying the validity of the League of Nations and subsequent UN trusteeship which ceded former German territories in Africa to friendly countries and the legality of the 1961 Plebiscite in which former British Cameroonians elected to join Nigeria while their French Cameroonian counterparts chose to remain in Cameroon.

    But we might as well go the whole hog to question the 1914 Amalgamation itself which collapsed and conflated Crown citizens and subjects as well as an indigenous free city-state together in an unholy and unhealthy colonial brew. It is now a known fact that beyond economic exploitation, the Brits had no master roadmap for their colonies. You cannot blame them. Nobody can give what they don’t have.

    Theirs was a simpleton’s formula based on experience. Just get a master-nationality to whip the rest of the folks into line and let them get on with it thereafter. In the colonial imaginary, order is superior to justice or equity. Since every crisis presents its own golden opportunity, this may as well be a golden opportunity for a heroic and visionary reconstruction of the sclerotic hulk of aborted nationhood that Nigeria has become before our very eyes.

    Readers of this column will confirm that we once cautioned Atiku about the dangers of taking on an embattled post-colonial state with his flanks terribly exposed. The modern Nigerian state is the equivalent of what is known in the old Congo as Bula Matari or crusher of rocks. As somebody who has wielded its power once and with maximum ruthless efficiency too, Atiku ought to know better.

    There are many who insist that Atiku’s current difficulties could be traced to his former boss and current patron, General Obasanjo who in his rendering of accounts wrote devastatingly and with acerbic scurrility about Atiku’s mystifying provenance and ambiguous paternity. Obasanjo thought he was settling accounts with posterity. But posterity has a way of stealing upon us with amazing celerity.

    No one at the moment is sure of what damning evidence of state-disrupting and nation-combusting activities the federal authorities have against the Adamawa politician to have led them to raise the stakes so dramatically and devastatingly. There are hints and echoes of Atiku-induced foreign meddling and of a Venezuela-like ambuscade of the state in the horizon. But it remains to be seen whether questioning his very nationality does not amount to killing a fly with a sledge hammer.

    In the past week, snooper has listened to some of Nigeria’s finest legal minds argue about the pros and cons of the allegations about Atiku’s nationality. While they all made eminent sense as far as the legal nuances and finer jurisprudential complications are concerned, none of them spoke to the nation-disabling possibilities of having a former vice president, a whole people and a vast swathe of prime land suddenly confronted by loss of nationality. The messy post-restoration politics of the Bakassi Peninsula is still very much with us.

    Famously, there used to be a certain Governor Michika from Adamawa State who always threatened to go back to his people on the other side of the border with Cameroon should Nigeria continue to displease and disappoint him. But that was mere political bluff and bluster.

    The people of Jada and environs who have been law-abiding citizens of Nigeria would certainly feel the psychological trauma of sudden statelessness. Ahmadu Bello whose vigorous campaigns in the area tilted the balance in favour of Nigeria will be weeping in his grave. Regional political cohesiveness and granite political alliances do not seem to last for long in these climes.

    To be sure, African countries are no stranger to controversy when it comes to the nationality and sub-nationality of some of their rulers. Till date, there many who insist that the late Ghanaian leader, Ignatius Kutu Acheampong,  was a Nigerian marooned in Ghana. In fact some people maintained that his middle name Kutu was a corruption of the Yoruba name Kuti. There were rumours that Kwame Nkrumah himself was of Ivorian descent.

    Up till date nobody knows where the founding leader of Malawi, Hastings Kamuzu Banda, actually came from. While he was alive, the topic was off airing and off the record, except you want to be fed to crocodiles. It was said that when he finally succumbed to senile dementia, Banda often lapsed into a strange pre-colonial Southern African dialect which was straight out of Sir Rider Haggard’s King Solomon’s Mine. 

    Coming home to Nigeria, speculations about the actual nationality of at least three of the past rulers often surface at enlightened gatherings. But nobody ever begrudged the fact that Thomas Aguiyi-Ironsi’s father was of Sierra Leonean extraction while Sani Abacha was fingered to be of Chadian provenance. First generation Nigerians of Sierra Leonean parentage have been known to surface at the uppermost reaches of military intelligence in Nigeria.

    Ironically it was rumoured that it was bitter animosity arising from a dispute about ethnic nationality and state of origin between two bosom friends and senior military officers jostling for promotion that was to lead to a memorable bloodbath and savage reckoning when one of them eventually emerged as military leader of the nation.

    On the wider continent, the nationality question can get very nasty indeed. In Cote D’Ivoire, the attempt to deny the Ivorian nationality of the current president, Allasane Quattara, led to disintegration and a bloody civil war.Having served as the country’s Prime Minister and top technocrat, the former high-flying international bureaucrat was summarily excluded from vying for the top job on the grounds that he was the son of itinerant nomads from Burkina Faso.

    Laurent Gbagbo, the former ruler of Cote D’Ivoire, was subsequently indicted for war crimes and jailed by the International Court sitting in Hague. In the old Zaire, Mobutu was to pay a high price for summarily expelling the Congolese Tutsi whose ancestors have lived in that corner of the Congo for over two hundred years. The Zairian war-cry was that a tree trunk does not become a crocodile simply because it has spent some time in water.

    We have not yet reached this dangerous point. But this is how it starts and utmost care must be taken. As it is noted, however much we choose to ignore history, history will not ignore us. It is interesting that the much ignored and much derided National Question keeps rearing its head in the most dangerous and unexpected of places however firmly we keep the lid sealed. This is the crux of the problem and not a mere electoral dispute.

  • Buhari challenges Atiku to present his credentials

    President Muhammadu Buhari has responded to allegations in the petition by Atiku Abubakar and his party, the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), before the Presidential Election Tribunal.

    Buhari, in a response filed on Tuesday by a team of lawyers led by Wole Olanipekun (SAN), debunked Atiku’s and PDP’s claim  that he was not qualified to run for President.

    The President said he was far more qualified than Atiku and challenged him to produce his academic credentials before the tribunal.

    He argued that Atiku was not qualified to run for the office.

    Buhari said he did not, “at any time, provide any false information in Form CF00] submitted to the lst respondent, either in 2014 or 2018.

    “The affidavit of compliance to the 2019 Form CF001 was correct in every material particular.

    “In filling Form CF001 in 2014 and 2019, respondent was not oblivious of the constitutional qualifications stipulated in Section 131 of the Constitution and interpreted in Section 318 of the same Constitution.

    “Petitioners themselves are also not oblivious of the fact that respondent possesses far more than the constitutional threshold expected for a candidate contesting for the office of President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    “The respondent avers that he is far more qualified, both constitutionally and educationally, to contest and occupy the office of President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria than the 1st petitioner (Atiku); and that in terms of educational qualifications, trainings and courses attended, both within and outside Nigeria, he is head and shoulder above the 1st petitioner in terms of acquisition of knowledge, certificates, laurels, medals and experience.

    “Respondent states further that it is the 1st petitioner, who is not qualified to contest the office of President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, and challenges the educational credentials and certificates of the 1st petitioner.

    “1st petitioner is hereby given notice to produce and tender his educational certificates, indicating the schools attended by him, with dates.”

    The President gave his educational resume as: “Elementary School, Daura and Maid’adua (1948 – 1952), Middle School, Katsina (1953-1956, Katsina Provincial Secondary School (now Government College, Katsina (1956-1961).”

    Buhari faulted the entire petition filed by the PDP and Atiku,noting that they are more about pre-election issues, which the Court of Appeal, sitting as a tribunal lacked jurisdiction.

    He also argued that the petitioners told lies against themselves in the petition and made conflicting claims which the tribunal cannot grant.

    Buhari noted that while the petitioners claimed to have won the last presidential election and also won elections in many states in the Southsouth and Southeastern part of the country, they also urged the court to nullify the election and order a fresh presidential election.

    Buhari argued that by virtue of Section of 137of the Electoral Act, petitioners cannot question the results of elections in states where they claim to have won and still retain themselves as petitioners.

    Buhari faulted the petitioners’ claim that the election was marred by corrupt practices and substantial non-compliance with the Electoral Act.

    The President also faulted the petitioners’ claim that they won the election, insisting that, by the result announced by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), he and his party, the All Progressives Congress (APC), won the last presidential election election.

    Buhari denied the claim by Atiku and PDP that the Trademoni policy of the government was a vote buying measure.

    He argued that the policy forms one of the many social intervention policies of the Federal Government, directed at alleviating the suffering of the masses.

    Buhari argued that the claim by the petitioners that they won by results they obtained from a purported INEC server lacked a legal basis and should be ignored by the tribunal.

    The President challenged the petitioners to produce evidence of their claims that their votes were depleted and manipulated.

    The President, in a preliminary objection he filed with his response, noted that the questions about his academic qualification and the reliefs predicated on the issues were matters over which the Court of Appeal had sat, adding that the tribunal lacked the jurisdiction to hear them.

    He also faulted the petitioners’ allegations of vote manipulation made against some security personnel, some named private individuals and organisations, without making them parties to the petition.

    He asked the tribunal to dismiss the petition on the grounds that the reliefs the petitioners sought by the petitioners are frivolous.

    “The entire reliefs are not justifiable, as the petitioners, who claim to have scored majority of lawful votes in substantial number of states, are also questioning their own return in those states.

    “The petitioners cannot act as petitioners and respondents in the same petition.

    “The alternative relief sought is self-defeating, apart from being frivolous.

    “The election to the office of President on 23rd February, 2019, was conducted in substantial compliance with the provision of the Electoral Act, 2010 (as amended),” he said.

    Buhari, challenged the petitioners to produce “specifics of website: www.factsdontlien .com, including its domain owner, proprietor, lessee, lessor,  etc., pleaded in paragraph 29 of the petition.

    “Details of the electronic data on the servers of the 1st respondent (Inec), including the time, the details were downloaded, the person who downloaded them and the means of downloading (paragraph 29 of the petition).

    “The documents from the 1st respondent, publishing the registered voters in Nigeria, as 84, 004, 084 and the number of PVCs collected as 72,775,502 (paragraph 30 of the petition).

    “Details and documents, showing a breakdown of the electronically collated votes of 664, 659, allegedly cast for the petitioners in Abia State (paragraph 34 of the petition).

    “Documents showing the published registered voters in Bauchi State, as pleaded in paragraph 41 of the petition.

    “Details of the electronically collated 332,618 votes in Bayelsa State (paragraph 42).

    “Documents showing how petitioners’ votes were depleted by 173,153, in Benue State (paragraph 44).

    “Details of how petitioners’ votes were depleted by 210,109 in Bomo State (paragraph 46 of the petition).”

  • Atiku: Cameroonian citizenship claims diversionary, says PDP

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has dismissed as diversionary the claims by the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) that former Vice President Atiku Abubabar is a Cameroonian and not a Nigerian.

    Describing the claims as reckless and groundless, the main opposition accused the APC of calculated attempt to trivialise and divert attention from the compelling issue of the ruling party’s alleged criminal rigging of this year’s presidential election.

    Atiku, who was PDP’s candidate in the February 23 poll, had filed a suit against President Muhammadu Buhari, winner of the election, at the election petitions tribunal, seeking to upturn the result announced by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    In a statement yesterday in Abuja, the nation’s capital, by its spokesman, Kola Ologbondiyan, the PDP said the Cameroonian tag on Atiku was a disingenuous and woeful design by the APC to overburden, distract and bog down the presidential election petitions tribunal with what he called trivialities, lies and falsehood to derail the course of justice.

    The statement said: “Such diversionary tactic has, however, only helped in further exposing the fact that the APC has no answers to the plethora of overwhelming evidence before the tribunal that the election was won by Atiku Abubakar and the PDP.

    “Whereas Atiku Abubakar’s citizenship by birth, even under our constitution, cannot be contested, it is indeed the biggest irony of the year, that his citizenship is being disputed by individuals whose ancestry has always been a subject of debate.

    “These individuals include those who, being not sure of their origins, have no love for Nigeria and even refused to be on the side of our nation at the 1985 summit of the defunct Organisation of Africa Unity (OAU) in Addis Ababa (the Ethiopian capital).

    “Such persons prefer to deploy our national resources for infrastructural development in affiliated places outside the shores of Nigeria, when our country is in dire need of attention…”