Tag: atiku

  • 2019: Fresh trouble for Atiku in Southeast

    •Ekweremadu, governors weigh options
    •Why S/East leaders are angry
    •Saraki wades in, holds talks with Ekweremadu

    Southeast political leaders are accusing the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) presidential candidate, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar of reneging on some pre-convention agreements reached with him.

    And this is the cause of the bad blood generated in the zone by Atiku’s choice of former Anambra State governor Peter Obi as running mate for the 2019 election, The Nation can now report.

    Particularly irked by the alleged renege are Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu and some governors in the zone, sources said yesterday.

    Associates of the Deputy Senate President and some PDP leaders in the Southeast are already putting pressure on Ekweremadu to review his status in the party.

    His options are to defect from the party or remain in PDP to fight for survival.

    The alleged agreements include consultation with Southeast leaders on how to pick vice presidential candidate; consensus on other positions conceded to the zone; finding a meeting point with the zone on Atiku’s idea of restructuring; need to spend one term in office and cede power to the Southeast in 2023; the offer of the VP slot to Ekweremadu (Right of First Refusal) before any other candidate.

    Atiku had allegedly offered Ekweremadu the vice presidential slot a year ago.

    Sources said the Deputy Senate President’s response had always been: “let us get the ticket first. I am interested in the Southeast being in the mainstream of power equation in Nigeria.”

    As the PDP Port Harcourt convention approached, majority of the Southeast leaders in PDP were determined to work for Atiku, hence their decision to shun overtures from Governor Nyesom Wike of Rivers State to team up with Sokoto State Governor Aminu Waziri Tambuwal.

    It was gathered that a few days before the convention, Ekweremadu and some Southeast governors shunned all the meetings convened by Wike.

    Within a week of Atiku’s emergence as PDP presidential candidate, he named Obi as running mate, causing bad blood in some political quarters in the zone.

    The first salvo was fired by Ebonyi State Governor  David Umahi who said Obi’s choice was made without consultation with leaders of the zone, although he was quick to add that he has nothing personally against Obi.

    Obi himself has since launched a mission to douse the tension, moving round the zone to talk to those that matter.

    But sources said the issue has continued to be a source of worry for  Atiku in the Southeast.

    “All our leaders have no grudges against Obi but they are just unhappy about how Atiku reneged on some of the agreements reached with him especially the essence of carrying stakeholders along,” a well- placed source said yesterday.

    “Shortly after he emerged as the PDP candidate, he has stopped consulting Ekweremadu, Southeast governors and leaders.

    “The painful thing is that he bowed to pressure from outside the Southeast to pick Obi and he did not care to revert to these leaders and governors on his choice.

    “For instance, Ekweremadu (the highest ranking political office holder in the Southeast) was not briefed and has not been briefed till today on why Obi was picked.

    “Yet, it was Ekweremadu who coordinated and delivered the block votes from the Southeast to Atiku at the convention.

    “The assumption is that if Atiku can treat South-East leaders and governors in this manner as a candidate, what if he becomes the President. It is just a matter of trust. When in need, he offered Ekweremadu the position of running mate. Courtesy demands that he should have also confided in Ekweremadu before choosing Obi.”

    Another source confirmed that following pressure from his associates and PDP leaders in the Southeast, Ekweremadu has started weighing options on his next step.

    Investigation revealed that the Deputy President of the Senate has to choose between remaining in PDP or defecting to prove a point that he is a force to reckon with.

    The third option is to remain in PDP and sabotage Atiku by entering into an alliance with President Muhammadu Buhari on a good deal for the Southeast if he is re-elected.

    The source added: “From the look of things, it seems there is a conspiracy within PDP to alienate Ekweremadu.

    “Apart from Atiku, the National Chairman of PDP, Prince Uche Secondus has not deemed it fit to call the Deputy President of the Senate on why Ekweremadu was not invited to the meeting where Obi was nominated. Even after the nomination, Secondus has not met with Ekweremadu on the choice of Obi.

    “The party and Atiku went ahead to constitute the Presidential Campaign Council without any input from Ekweremadu. This is an insult.

    “Some powers that be are angry with Ekweremadu for backing Atiku and the same presidential candidate does not care a hoot about Ekweremadu.

    “It is regretful that we all betrayed Wike and now Atiku is abandoning our leaders.”

    Responding to a question, the source added: “With the choice of Obi, Atiku is going about as if he has the South-East in his pocket. Far from it, the scenario may be different during the presidential election.

    “Atiku needs to sit down afresh with Ekweremadu and other leaders to win votes from the zone. These are matchmakers in their own right.

    “The unfinished business includes the following:

    *Reaching consensus on other posts to concede to the zone;

    * Finding a meeting point with the zone on Atiku’s idea of restructuring;

    *Need to spend one term in office; and

    *Ceding power to the Southeast in 2023

    “Without definite answers to these demands, Atiku should forget the backing of the Southeast.”

    It was also gathered that  Senate  President Bukola Saraki, who is the Director -General of the PCC, has waded into the complaints  of the Southeast leaders.

    A PDP leader said: “I am aware that Saraki has opened up talks with Ekweremadu.”

     

     

  • How we plan to win 2019 election, by Buhari, Atiku

    Tony Momoh projects win for President

    Atiku camp: we’ll defeat him

    It is less than four months to the presidential election, but the shadow boxing has begun in earnest.

    The two leading contenders are bragging about their chances.

    Former Minister of Information Prince Tony Momoh yesterday said he was confident President Muhammadu Buhari will win.

    Momoh told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on telephone that the president deserved re-election.

    The Atiku Abubakar camp disagreed. It said the former Vice President would retire President Muhammadu Buhari to his village in Daura after the election.

    Momoh said Atiku, the candidate of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), could not stop Buhari as he (Abubakar) was only popular with the elite and not the masses.

    Momoh, a chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC), said the Buhari administration had impacted on many ordinary Nigerians, and they would vote him in 2019.

    He, however, said Buhari would lose some votes in the North because Atiku is from the region, but that the APC candidate would make up in other regions to win.

    “I don’t think Atiku can defeat Buhari. No; he can’t, Buhari has done well in the delivery of his electoral promises and he will get the support of the people.

    “Look at the war against insurgency, for instance, has he not done well? Is the situation in the Northeast as it used to be? Of course, there is relative security in the region and the people will want to vote for an administration that made that possible.

    “Again, the school feeding programme, the conditional cash transfers and the other social programmes of the government, tens of thousands of Nigerians have benefited. You don’t expect them not to vote Buhari.

    “These are the real people that will vote, not the people on Facebook or Twitter. The people who are moving against the President now are the elite, not the people, and the reasons are obvious.

    “Yes, Atiku is popular with the elite, but how many are they? So I don’t see him winning, though, he will get votes in the North as he is from that region and he is a Fulani and a Muslim like Buhari.

    “However, the President will make up for lost votes in other regions like Southeast and South-South where he has delivered many projects to win,’’ he said.

    The former minister said the achievements of the President’s fight against corruption and the power of incumbency would work in his favour.

    To Momoh, it is an illusion for the PDP to believe the selection of former Governor Peter Obi of Anambra as Atiku’s running mate will deliver the region to the party.

    He said the Igbo are politically sophisticated and it had never been easy predicting their direction in any election.

    Momoh argued that Buhari picked running mates, the late Chuba Okadigbo and the late Ume Ezeoke, on two occasions for elections, but still lost in the Southeast.

    The former minister said the region was open to both candidates in 2019, based on the large number of both APC and PDP members in the area.

    He urged Nigerians to participate in the electoral process and obtain their Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs) to vote leaders of their choice.

    “The power to choose in 2019 belongs to the people. For that reason, I urge Nigerians to obtain their PVCs to participate in the process.

    “It is only when we participate that we can vote people of our choice to help realise the development objectives of our nation,’’ Momoh said.

    He urged the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to do its best to deliver credible elections in 2019.

    In an email message last night by Atiku’s Media Adviser Paul Ibe, the former Vice President said the  2019 election will be a referendum on the “failed” All Progressives Congress (APC) administration.

    Ibe said: “This is a government that has failed on all fronts. Nigerians can no longer be hoodwinked by the Orwellian propaganda that is the signature of this administration.

    “The 2019 presidential election will be determined by Nigerian voters and not by political soothsayers.

    “Nigerians will make a determination whether to settle for incompetence versus competence; cluelessness versus knowhow; joblessness versus employment; restiveness versus engagement; divisiveness versus unity; nepotism versus merit and bigotry versus inclusiveness.

    “It is instructive to say that since His Excellency Atiku Abubakar emerged as the presidential candidate of the PDP, the APC administration has gone into a panic mode.

    “They need to be reminded that they cannot stop an idea whose time has come. Nigerians are yearning for a competent and visionary leadership that will fix the mess that has been made of our economy, give jobs to the teeming unemployed, ensure security, heal the divisions in the land and get Nigeria working again. Atiku is well-wired to provide such leadership.”

    Babatope said Atiku was an experienced politician and that he had the capacity, credentials and clout to win and return power to PDP.

    “Atiku is the new face of the PDP. It is time for the party to win back power because I am confident Atiku will win.

    “My confidence is based on his political experience from being the founder of the PDM with late Yar’adua to being the Vice-President where he did very well.

    “He also has national appeal as he is a detribalised Nigerian with successful businesses all over. He is a bridge builder, a man with great capacity and passion to lead.

    “Atiku is the next president. Our People want him. He will rescue Nigeria, I am so sure he will win,” he said.

    Asked if the former vice-president did not have the ascribed qualities when he failed in his past attempts to be president, Babatope said everyone had his appointed time.

    He noted that Buhari also failed in his past attempts under different parties to be president until 2015 when he emerged under APC.

    Babatope said 2019 was the destined year for Atiku’s presidency and that Nigerians would be better for it.

    He said the selection of former governor Peter Obi of Anambra State as Atiku’s running mate would improve the party’s victory margin in the election.

    He added that the APC had failed Nigerians and that the PDP would return in 2019 “to restore hope”.

    Babatope said though the South-West PDP was not in the zoning equation of the party for now, he believed the region would gain massively at the end of the day.

    “We know how we do our things in the party to favour everybody. For now, we are preparing for the election, by the time we win, I am sure the South-West PDP will gain big from the power arrangement,” he said.

     

  • ‘Our conditions to support Atiku’

    The President, Yoruba Council of Youths Worldwide, Aremo Oladotun Hassan, has given conditions to back Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) presidential candidate Atiku Abubakar.

    Hassan, in a statement, demanded key positions for the Yoruba nation from Atiku.

    The statement reads: “The leadership of the Yoruba Council of Youths Worldwide(YCYW) heartily felicitates with all Nigerians especially the good people of South East for the recent nomination of Mr. Peter Obi as the Vice Presidential nominee to His Excellency, Waziri Atiku Abubakar, GCON, the People’s Democratic Party presidential candidate at the forthcoming general elections come 2019, however, in furtherance to our former demand for the post of the Vice President which has been zoned and determined based on necessity and the negotiating strenghts of the Eastern bloc, and in the face of the compelling need to feature competent and vibrant minds that will deliver succint dividends of democracy to the dying and frustrated Nigerians, as well as surpass the inefficient and docile incumbent President Muhammodu Buhari APC led federal government, and while rescuing the nation from imminent total collapse, we believe in equitable justice and fair distribution of resources along this the same line of thought, we are further compelled to demand for a fair share positions commensurate to our goodwill contributed efforts as a region.

    “ In the face of political trajectory, in extant violation and breach of laws and statutes, nepotism, deceits, oppression, unbearable pains and agony in today’s Nigeria, precipitating our unanimous resolution, and present our fundamental demands and negotiable stance to the People’s Democratic Party presidential candidate: His Excellency, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, GCON, the PDP, the entire coalition parties and supporting groups, while congratulating him as the President in waiting come 29th May, 2019, we are unequivocally  setting our priorities right and straight on the following demands: The vantage post of the Secretary to Government of the Federation  (OSGF) to the Southwest, in addition to the Chief of Staff, National Security Adviser, Minister of Justice and Attorney General of the Federation, Minister of Finance, Minister of Petroluem, Minister of Agriculture, Minister of Youth Development. While craving for other Board appointments beneficial to all Nigerians.

    “We carefully arrived at this in view of our noble undeterred commitments to the peaceful coexistence, unity and progress of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, while hoping this will galvanise people’s support and deliver over 20 million votes.”

  • Obasanjo and canonisation of Atiku

    As it is often said, a week in politics is a long time. In just one week, Atiku Abubakar transformed from Saul to Paul. He was also canonized as Saint Atiku. He owes this change of fortune to the trinity of Catholic Church’s Arch-Bishop Mathew Kukah, David Oyedepo of the Living Faith Church and a leading prosperity prophet, and Abubakar Gumi, the Zaria based Islamic scholar and cleric, supported by Pa Ayo Adebanjo of Afenifere, all working for the imperial Obasanjo.

    It all started with Atiku Abubakar clinching the PDP ticket for the 2019 presidential contest at the expense of Bukola Saraki and Aminu Tambuwal in what some have described as the battle of dollars. Immediately the victory was secured, their lords spiritual, who have never hidden their sympathy for PDP, posing as peace makers, took Atiku to his former boss, ex-President  Obasanjo who had shortly before then said: “If I support Atiku for anything, God will not forgive me. If I do not know, yes. But once I know, Atiku can never enjoy my support”.  He went on to document in his “My Watch” what he knew about Atiku, i.e., his “propensity to corruption, his tendency to disloyalty, his inability to say and stick to the truth all the time, a propensity for poor judgment, his belief and reliance on marabouts”.

    With the intervention of their lords spiritual and Pa Adebanjo however, that became ancient history. Obasanjo who  likes playing god (Shagari, 1979, Yar’Adua, 2007, Jonathan, 2011 and Buhari 2015) after canonising Atiku a saint started referring to him as ‘the president to be’.

    Obasanjo who has also been described by his daughter as someone “who sees himself at the epicentre of the Nigerian nation, whose destiny, he literally cages in his pocket and nurtures to feed his whims”, does not believe he owes Nigeria any explanation for his Atiku volte-face. With an overbearing haughtiness, he went on to declare: “We have reviewed what went wrong on the side of Atiku. And in all honesty, my former vice-president has rediscovered and repositioned himself”. The ‘we’, is assumed, refers to the politicking lords spiritual who have all along engaged Buhari in silent war over his anti-corruption crusade, his alleged Islamisation agenda and his handling of the herdsmen’s mindless killings.

    And admonishing Atiku thereafter, imperial Obasanjo, the “ father of the nation” courtesy of PDP, declared: “And when you become Nigerian President which, insha-Allah, you will be, remember what we did together in government – we ran an administration by Nigerians for all Nigerians where merit and performance count more than blood relationship, friendship or kith and kin.”

    But first, what are those things they did together? We have it on record that in 2000, some elected PDP legislators said they needed to recoup their election expenses having sold their houses to raise funds. They created artificial fuel scarcity with queues at filling stations. Within three months, the PPPRA bill became law. A House probe later showed this was the instrument PDP stalwarts and their siblings used to defraud the country to the tune of about N1.7trillion under the fuel subsidy scam.

    It is also on record that Obasanjo delegated Atiku Abubakar to oversee the National Council on Privatisation that presided over the sales of the so-called dysfunctional federal assets between 1999 and 2003. A House probe later showed that what accrued to Nigeria from investment of about $100b between 1957 and 1997 after the exercise was about $1.5b.

    And when there was nothing left to share, they came up with ingenious government policy thrust called monetization policy. It was through this that inherited national structures dating back to the colonial period scattered across the nation including lawmakers and senate president mansions were shared among PDP stalwarts, their sympathisers and civil servants.

    Of course Atiku also secured the contract ‘for the monitoring and supervision of pilotage districts in the Exclusive Economic Zone of Nigeria on terms that permits Intels to receive revenue generated in each pilotage district from service boat operations in consideration for 28 per cent of total revenue as commission to Intels”, a contract which was illegal as it contravened the “express provisions of Sections 80(1) and 162(1) and (10) of the 1999 Constitution.

    Now let us also examine Obasanjo’s claim of merit and performance as the criteria for appointments during his administration.

    Again records show Obasanjo’s appointments from 1999-2007 were driven more by political consideration than merit or performance. For instance, many of those he handpicked and imposed as governors through the massive election fraud of 2003 were found to have exhibited serious character flaws. Many of them are currently in court trying to defend their honour. It is also on record that many of his former ministers have been fingered by various probes as being behind the derailment of many of the infrastructural projects his administration initiated. Their names featured prominently in the current Travel Ban list.

    Even where Obasanjo’s appointees were eminently qualified, their appointments were not often without a tinge of mischief.  For instance, in the run up to the 1999 election, Obasanjo had said, Chief Bola Ige, the Afenifere deputy leader was the only Yoruba leader he feared. Obasanjo was to later exploit Ige’s dispute with his Afenifere colleagues over the emergence of Chief Olu Falae’s as AD presidential candidate. He lured him to PDP as minister for power and later Attorney General. He was assassinated in his room in 2001 by yet to be identified assailants.

    Then Obasanjo, who admitted visiting NADECO and Afenifere leader, Pa Abraham Adesanya three times to seek Yoruba support for his 1999 presidential ambition with the old man insisting on each occasion that Obasanjo would not get Yoruba support because ‘he is not one of us”, after winning the election without Yoruba support, decided to appoint his daughter a minister despite Pa Adesanya’s protest. Then Obasanjo went after Awolowo, the sage himself. After working against him during the 1979 election and after claiming in his “Not My Will” that he achieved on a platter of gold what Awo had been fighting for when he Obasanjo was a bare-footed school boy”, he went on to appoint his daughter as Nigeria  ambassador to Holland.

    All the above appointments were but a celebration of Obasanjo’s victory to spite Yoruba voters who rejected him even in his ward in 1999 and their leaders who had told him to his face “he is not one of us”, for refusing to identify with Yoruba aspirations.

    One of the things John Campbell recommended as a way forward for Nigeria during his last book launch besides funding of primary school and women education in the north is bringing back the manufacturing sector. Obasanjo/Atiku and PDP are responsible for the collapse of our once thriving pharmaceutical, ceramics, furniture, textile, shoe, automobile, battery and other industries. They are responsible for the collapse of the health sector when PDP stalwarts without expertise cornered teaching hospital contracts. They also presided over the near collapse of some of Nigeria high flying institutions that produced the likes of Awojobis, Osuntokuns, Chinua Achebes, Soyinkas, Ishaya Audus, etc. through under-funding while they set up their own high fees paying private secondary schools and universities.

    But a people deserve the government they get. Nigerians therefore reserve the right to vote out Buhari if they think he has not met their expectations. But as Campbell has warned, we must be sure his replacement is someone who can outperform Buhari. Definitely such a person cannot be Obasanjo/Atiku who in an era of money without sweat turned our nation to importer of labour of other societies leaving Buhari to now cope with massive unemployment of our youths, hunger  and poverty across the nation.

    Obasanjo/Atiku era of debauchery is no substitute for Buhari’s well-advertised failings such as nepotism, disregard for public opinion and ineffective leadership.

  • Atiku Presidential campaign council: PDP releases list of members

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) on Tuesday released the list of party members to handle the campaign team of the its presidential candidate, Atiku Abubakar.

    The party chairman, Uche Secondus, shared the list on his Twitter handle @UcheSecondus.

    He said: “After due consultation with party stakeholders, PDP, under my leadership has approved the following as members of Atiku Presidential Campaign Council.”

    Read Also: Rain in Ado-Ekiti ahead of Fayemi’s inauguration

    Full list as released by Secondus:

    1. President of the Senate, Bukola Saraki as Director General of Atiku Presidential Campaign Council.

    2. Governor Aminu Tambuwal as the Zonal Coordinator for NorthWest.

    3. Governor Ibrahim Dankwambo as Zonal Coordinator for NorthEast.

    4. Governor Samuel Ortom as the Zonal Coordinator for NorthCentral

    5. Governor Dave Umahi as the Zonal Coordinator for SouthEast.

    6. Barrister Nyesom Wike as the Zonal Coordinator for SouthSouth

    7. Governor Ayodele Fayose is the Zonal Coordinator for the SouthWest.

    8. Barr Kabiru Tanimu Turaki, SAN, Chairman, Legal Matters.

    9. Governor Udom Emmanuel as the Chairman, Fund Raising.

     

  • I was not in Abeokuta to endorse Atiku, says Kukah

    The Catholic Bishop of Sokoto, Mathew Hassan Kukah on Monday said he was not at the Hilltop mansion of ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo in Abeokuta last Wednesday to endorse the presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party(PDP), Alh. Atiku Abubakar.

    He said he only went to reconcile the former President and his hitherto estranged deputy.

    He said he declined moves by Obasanjo to drag him into what he described as a “forest of politics.”

    He insisted that his personal preoccupation was a” pastoral one, and not a political one.”

    He said as a convener of National Peace Committee(NPC), he has a moral limit which he sticks to.

    He said when it was clear that both President Obasanjo and Abubakar were on the verge of making peace, he alerted the Chairman of the NPC, General Abdusalam Abubakar and a former Secretary-General of the Commonwealth, Sir Emeka Anyaoku.

    Kukah, who made the clarifications in a statement, said he was “a bit nervous, seeing that the circle was getting larger for something I thought was between three of us.”

    He said he rejected moves by Obasanjo to drag him into a hall to go and say how he and others got to Abeokuta because it had a tone of politics.

    He said he also skipped lunch after the session and avoided flying in the same aircraft with Atiku when he was offered a seat.

    He said having been conversant with Catholic doctrine, he knew the limit of a priest in political engagement.

    He said the widely circulated photograph of the reconciliation meeting was taken behind closed doors.

    He explained that nothing could have prepared him for the way things finally shaped up.

    He said theoretically and practically, he has come to know that peace making is a very risky business and often a thankless job.

    The statement said: “I have deliberately made this explanatory note long because I think it is necessary that people make up their minds based on the facts, given my central role in the event.

    “I note that Sheikh Gumi has already told his own side of the story. I feel obliged to state my own side so that Nigerians can have a clearer picture of my own involvement.

    “ Sadly, I personally did not read President Obasanjo’s statement until two days later on the Internet since I was not physically in the hall.

    “Although trying to reconcile President Obasanjo and Alhaji Atiku Abubakar was something I had been working on intermittently in the last few years, nothing could have prepared me for the way things finally shaped up. My focus all along had been with President Obasanjo and I had never brought Alhaji Abubakar into what I was doing. Quite fortuitously, a chance meeting changed the tide in favour of reconciliation.

    “Understandably, the pictures of the four of us (President Obasanjo, Alhaji Abubakar, Shaikh Gumi and I) literally lit up the social media and elicited divergent reactions from the general public.

    “Although over 99% of the reactions that have come to me have been largely those of commendation, with people focusing, rightly, on the reconciliation, there have been others whose focus has been on an isolated development that had absolutely nothing to do with what I had in mind all these years, namely, the endorsement.

    “I must say that I am eternally grateful to God that this reconciliation finally happened. The focus of attention has been on the endorsement of Alhaji Abubakar by President Obasanjo, a development that I can call the third leg of the process which I initiated. I am not sure of President Obasanjo’s other interlocutors after we agreed to meet leading to the participation of other actors and so, I will only clear the air on what I can take full responsibility for.”

    Kukah gave insights into how he was contacted by Obasanjo and how he resisted being dragged into what he described as a “forest of politics.”

    He added: “Let me state first that I am a priest of the Catholic Church and by the grace of God, a Bishop. I have more than a passing knowledge of our discipline and doctrine in matters relating to the role of a Catholic priest in political engagement. My doctoral thesis was on Religion and Politics in Nigeria. So, this is an area that I have written and spoken extensively about for over thirty years. I am therefore very clear about the boundaries, the slippery slopes and the contexts. Unlike Shaikh Gumi and Rev. Oyedepo who were invited to this event, I am a central actor. So let me explain what really happened.

    “On Tuesday, October 9th, 2018 I had the honor of being the Guest Speaker for the annual Conference of the Four Square Gospel Church in Alagomeji, Lagos. (The Presidential Spokesman, Femi Adesina, a member of this Church had first invited me some years back but I could not honour the invitation). President Obasanjo was the Chairman of the occasion.

    “ At the end of the lecture, he indicated that he would have to leave because he had a scheduled meeting. I told him I needed to see him briefly and he obliged. I brought up again the issue of what he thought of his reconciliation with Alhaji Atiku.

    “My last discussion with him this year was either January or February. His response was still negative and he told me what he later told the media. I reminded him that I was not interested in the politics of reconciliation but the spiritual angle.

    “ After all, I said to him, ‘as a Christian, this is an important thing for you to do’. He was quiet and then said he would speak with me later that evening on his final decision. We parted, he to his car and I returned to the Church to end the event.

    “At about 9pm the same Tuesday, he called to say that he had thought over the issues I had raised and finally decided to accept my suggestion and that yes, he would be happy to reconcile with Alhaji Abubakar. When did he think we could meet then, I asked him? He said he would look at his diary and get back to me later.

    “Then, just before 11pm the same Tuesday, I received another call from him saying his diary was full, that the earliest date for him was October 21st. I accepted happily and told him that I would try and reach Alhaji Abubakar either directly, or through his aides to convey the news.

    “My initial intention had been to return to Abuja that same evening from Lagos, but my hosts at the Four Square Gospel had suggested that I should get some rest. Next morning, Wednesday October 10th, after I had finished celebrating the Holy Mass, I received a call from President Obasanjo: ‘Bishop, listen, I have changed my mind’. My heart nearly sank, but before I could ask why, he said: ‘Let us do it tomorrow if you can reach Atiku. I am going to deliver a lecture in Ife and will be back home before 1pm. “So, tell him to come at 1pm’. I started frantic efforts to reach Alhaji Atiku without luck. I reached one of his aides, Paul Ibe, and asked him to please let him know I am trying to reach him. Finally, at about 1pm, I received a call from him. I told him what had happened with President Obasanjo. He agreed and said he would be in Abeokuta for 1pm on Thursday.

    “I got back to my hosts, the Four Square Gospel Church to tell them about the change in my travelling plans especially as I had no car to take me to Abeokuta.

    “ I didn’t want to ask President Obasanjo’s people to send me a vehicle because I believed I needed a leeway of independence and trust. My hosts were exceedingly gracious in making a vehicle available, a driver and an aide to take me to Abeokuta.”
    Kukah admitted that Obasanjo expanded the scope of the session beyond what he anticipated.

    He said the development made him to walk up to the former President to ask for the protocol for the meeting.

    He said: “ Earlier that morning, President Obasanjo had called me a second time and told me that he wanted Alhaji Abubakar to come with the Chairman of the PDP, and two or three others. He also told me he had also invited both Shaikh Gumi and Rev. Oyedepo. This was welcome news- Rev. Oyedepo is a kinsman of his, and the presence of Shaikh Gumi made sense. I was a bit nervous, seeing that the circle was getting larger for something I thought was between three of us.

    “I arrived Abeokuta about 12.15pm ahead of both President Obasanjo and Alhaji Abubakar and his team. Alhaji Abubakar and his team arrived, and then I saw more and more people coming in. “I saw familiar faces of different people who turned out to be the leaders of Afenifere. All these years, whenever I brought up this matter of reconciliation, my idea has always been for the three of us to sit down together. I still believed that the meeting would be between the two of them and the three religious leaders.”

    Kukah said he rejected moves by Obasanjo to drag him into a hall to go and say how he and others got to Abeokuta because it had a tone of politics.

    He added: “When President Obasanjo appeared, I walked up to him and said I wanted to know the protocol for the meeting. He suggested that we would meet in a hall and that I should say a few words about how we got here.

    “ I declined because it seemed again that at this point, we were in small forest of politics and I had no wish to be caught in it. I was happy that what I wanted to achieve had been achieved, namely, getting these two men to put the past behind them.

    “My personal preoccupation was a pastoral one, and not a political one. I was uncomfortable with this and I decided to make my position clear. I offered a different proposal to help us sift the moral grain from the chaff of politics via a three-step process so as to insulate the three of us from the political fallout.

    “I proposed that the first step would be for he and Alhaji Abubakar to sit down behind closed doors, sort out their issues and then the next step would be for both Sheikh Gumi and I to go in and listen to the two of them as Rev. Oyedepo had not arrived.

    “After that, I said, they could continue with the third phase which from what I could see was high wire politics and I had no wish to be caught in the web. After they both finished their brief meeting, Sheikh Gumi and I went in and sat down with the two of them.

    “ We had some small briefing and then both of us spoke briefly on what they had done, encouraging them to ensure that this reconciliation holds. I even said jokingly that I am a Catholic priest and our marriage vows are indissoluble! After that, we prayed and then took what has now become the famous photograph behind closed doors.

    “At this point, I felt that my spiritual duties had been achieved and I was prepared to maintain my independence. Sheikh Gumi and I shook hands and although I was hungry and food was being laid out, I skipped lunch. I quietly let myself out by the side door, got into the Four Square Gospel car and we drove off to Lagos. Despite the dread of Lagos traffic and the disruption of flights at the Airport in Lagos, I had declined the offer of a seat in the Aircrafts which had flown them to Abeokuta.

    “ Although flying with them was the best (and most convenient) assurance I had of getting to Abuja in time for a speaking engagement at an event with the Sultan and Cardinal Onaiyekan for 9am the next day, it was necessary to ensure that I took no favours from any of the two parties.

    “I was not in Abeokuta to endorse Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, the candidate of the Peoples’ Democratic Party. I perfectly understand the feelings of many of my friends and members of the opposition who believe that I travelled with Alhaji Abubakar and his team to attend his endorsement by President Obasanjo, but I reiterate that this was not the case.

    “All the bills for my travel were settled by the Four Square Gospel hosts for the earlier dated programme who had bought my tickets, booked accommodation for me and took care to get me to the airport for my flight to Abuja and Sokoto.

    “I am a strong believer in a peaceful and united Nigeria, ideals for which I have striven and served my entire adult life as a thinker and a priest. My instincts for reconciliation and peace were sharpened during my involvement and experience with the Oputa Panel. When the Generals refused to respond to the invitation of Oputa Panel, I personally undertook to visit both General Babangida and Buhari (he was not at home) at a time that today’s latter day Buharists were asking the Panel to compel them to come or risk being blacked out of national life. Objective-minded people will remember that back in 2001, when the Christian community and many of President Buhari’s opponents claimed that General Buhari had said that Muslims should vote only for Muslims, many people in the Christian community were disappointed that I wrote a long article to explain the context of what he had said after speaking with the General. His party, the ANPP later used part of my article for their 2003 campaigns! My faith and experience have taught me to learn to suspend judgment till I have heard both sides of a story, no matter what.

    “I hope that this clarification helps to allay the concerns of those who may have seen all of these in a different light. Many minds will remain set no matter the reasonableness of my comments here, and this is to be expected- one cannot please everyone. This is why it is often best to seek to please only one’s own conscience, and here, mine is very clear.

    “I have been involved in a few behind-the-scene shuttle diplomacy for years, largely on my own initiative, taking advantage of my knowledge of those engaged in the conflict or at the invitation of third parties. Some have succeeded and some have not. As priest, it is not in my place to publicize what we have achieved.

    “I am the Convener of the National Peace Committee. This alone is enough to place a moral boundary which I am bound to respect. The NPC able to accomplish much because of trust and that is not what I can treat lightly. When it became clear that both President Obasanjo and Abubakar were on the verge of making peace, I alerted the Chairman of the NPC, General Abdusalam. Since I happen to be in Lagos, I drove to the Ikoyi home of Chief Emeka Anyaoku and alerted him. I spoke to my Metropolitan, the Archbishop of Kaduna, Archbishop Matthew Ndagoso. All in all, everyone believed this was a very good move if we could achieve it. None of us imagined the third phase of this meeting.

    “Both theoretically and practically, I have come to know that peace making is a very risky business and often a thankless job. I recall listening to the late Kofi Anan speak about his on two different occasions. Anyone involved in peace making from domestic quarrels to larger battles, must be ready for the good, the bad and the ugly.

    “In the end, we must wear the shoes of the long distance runner, believing and trusting that the truth never ever sinks to the bottom of the sea. The truth will always have a stubborn way of defying the hostile elements and popping up at the right time, no matter how long it takes.”
    Kukah took time to explain that he was not in any way involved in politics.

    He said: “I perfectly understand that with Alhaji Abubakar having just picked up the Presidential ticket of his Party, without providing this context, definitely, I can appreciate why many people will have a lot of anxieties. They will definitely be right to question my neutrality.

    “ However, I have far too many friends across party lines for me to openly endorse one candidate or party against the other. It will be against the principles of the Code of Canon Law of the Catholic Church which regulates our public life in the political space. The President of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference has signed a statement to the effect that no altar of the Catholic Church must ever be open to any politician, something we have all taken seriously. I therefore hope that this clarification helps those whose minds are open.

    “I am thankful to God and quite pleased that this reconciliation took place and that I was a small instrument in making it happen. However, I am sorry that it has been given a different colouration and doubts to many people. Its timing was purely fortuitous and purely circumstantial not a contrivance. Personally, I will never relent in the very urgent task of making peace and reconciliation across the spectrum of our country.”

  • 2019: Hurdles before Buhari, Atiku

    With the emergence of President Muhammadu Buhari and former Vice President Atiku Abubakar as the presidential candidates of All Progressives Congress and the Peoples Democratic Party respectively, Nigeria’s 2019 election promises to be a tough contest. Associate Editor, Sam Egburonu, reports on some of the hurdles the two leading contestants are likely to face and some of the things that may go for them

    EVEN before the political parties concluded their presidential primaries late last week, concerned observers have speculated on the likely texture and outcome of the 2019 elections. They however agreed the race would be mainly between the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) and the leading opposition party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    While some contended that it would be a walkover for APC and its candidate, President Muhammadu Buhari, no matter who the PDP would produce as its candidate, others said it would all depend on how the PDP arrived at the choice of its presidential candidate. The fear was that if the process is flawed and gives birth to a candidate that is not generally acceptable to the aspirants, the party would implode, leaving a weakened opposition that would not be a match to the ruling party.

    But with the election of former Vice President Atiku Abubakar as the Presidential Candidate of PDP last Sunday and the reported wide acceptance of the process that led to his emergence, especially the support so far given to him by the key stakeholders, including former President Olusegun Obasanjo, the picture of the 2019 Presidential Election seems clearer.

    Experience

    As the two leading presidential contenders in the forthcoming presidential election prepare for the election, none would boast of confronting a neophyte in the game. The two are well experienced.

    President Muhammadu Buhari, the candidate of APC, is a sitting president. Aside the fact that he fought gallantly and defeated a sitting president in 2015 elections, he had contested severally for the position before the 2015 success. For example, he unsuccessfully contested for the plum seat in the 2003, 2007, and 2011 general elections. Before then, Buhari, a retired army general, was a Military Head of State between 31 December 1983 and 27 August 1985.

    Alhaji Atiku, who worked in the Nigeria Customs Service for 20 years, rising to become the Deputy Director, as the second highest position in the Service was then known, is equally experienced. He was an elected Vice-President of Nigeria on the ticket of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) between1999 and 2007 under President Olusegun Obasanjo.

    A disciple and heir of late Shehu Musa Yar’Adua’s political machinery, his active partisan political career dates back to 1991, when he first ran for the office of governor in the then Gongola State (now Adamawa and Taraba states). In 1993 elections, he ran for a presidential ticket and placed third after Chief MKO Abiola and Amb. Babagana Kingibe in the Social Democratic Party’s primary election.

    He was however elected the Governor of Adamawa State in 1998, but as fate would have it, while he was still the Governor-Elect, he was chosen by the Peoples Democratic Party’s Presidential Candidate, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, as running mate. The two went on to win elections in February 1999, thus making him Nigeria’s second democratically elected vice president. Since he left office in 2007, Atiku has remained very active in the country’s political theatre.

    “Talking about experience, it is not certain any of the two candidates would be dismissed with a wave of the hand. I think they are both experienced enough. That is why this race should not be taken for granted by any of the candidates. In political parlance, it would be right to say it would be a grand clash of two warlords, a serious two-horse race,” said Dr. Israel Magbisa, a political analyst.

    Image battle

    Though the two candidates are already brandishing their past records as the reasons they believe they should be preferred for the top job, it has been noted that common Nigerians’ assessment or interpretation of the character traits of the two leaders may also prove to be tricky.

    Considered for example as Mr. Integrity, a reputation that unarguably boosted his popularity rating in 2015 and earned him massive votes across the country, President Buhari will again depend largely on this virtue and the people’s assessment of him in this regard to win votes in 2019.

    Dr. Magbisa explains that for Mr. President, the issue of integrity is today both a great asset and the litmus test he has to pass to win in 2019. “The question today is whether Mr. President, in the last three years of his administration, has proved his admirers and common Nigerians right that he is indeed Mr. Integrity as he purports or as his supporters said he is. That is what will determine whether he would still get the overwhelming votes he got in 2015. You will agree with me that over the years, so much have happened and so the handlers of Buhari will need to do more than just announce repeatedly that he is incorruptible. What is important now is how far his actions as the president have proven to the people that he is fair minded, honest and honourable in all instances. ”

    Another issue Buhari may have to contend with, according to Magbisa, is the way he is perceived, especially by average Southeasterners or south-southerners, most of who have been made to believe that he is sectional. “Recall that Buhari’s political opponents used that claim to effectively blackmail him in the 2015 elections. They said he is an Igbo hater. That impression affected his performance in that part of the country. So, for the forthcoming 2019 elections, the performance of Buhari in the Southeast and South-south will most likely depend, to a very large extent, on how far he has worked to debunk that allegation and change that impression,” he said.

    On Atiku, Magbisa is also critical on the image battle. As he puts it, “for PDP’s candidate, this is the very issue he must tackle if he hopes to win the votes of commoners across the country. There is no doubt that opponents of Atiku have continued to portray him as part of the corrupt elite that wrecked the country even though he is yet to be convicted for any crime. It would be recalled that the closest he has come to be linked to a corrupt case was the William Jefferson incidence in the United States. Atiku’s name had in that case come up in the trial of a former US congressman indicted over some felonies involving bribery in Nigeria. Though his supporters say he was never been tried over the matter or any other corruption case, close observers said Atiku must however convince Nigerians that the image of corruption, which his opponents have consistently tried to hang on his neck, is not true. His electoral fortunes, it seems, depends, to a very large extent on how far he is able to convince Nigerians that he is cleaner than his political opponents may try to portray him. This is even so because his opponent in the race, President Buhari, has continued to make anti-corruption the anchor of his campaigns.

    Hunger in the land

    Perhaps because of the harsh realities of today, most of the contenders in the 2019 presidential election have made management of economy a major campaign topic. The Nation investigation shows that in fact, most voters are eager to see which of the presidential candidates and political parties are willing and capable of ending the hunger in the land.

    It is on record that one of President Buhari’s most advertised achievement is that his administration was able to navigate the country out of recession. On the surface, this should constitute an advantage for Buhari and APC, but reports that the hunger in the land has persisted and that the country seems headed towards another recession constitute major challenges for Buhari.

    According to Bamidele Fadehun, “this is another factor that may pose as a hurdle for Atiku and PDP. This is so because APC’s government under Buhari has paid great emphasis on agriculture, a policy aimed at ending hunger. It is therefore incumbent on Atiku to prove that he has something better to offer.”

    Fadehun told The Nation that notwithstanding these personalized hurdles; the two leading presidential candidates are contesting on strong platforms, national enough to win the 2019 polls. “APC and PDP are well established political parties today, but as an incumbent president, Muhammadu Buhari seems to enjoy more advantages. So, Atiku has more points to prove, if he hopes to dislodge the current president,” Fadehun said.

  • Tambuwal promises to mobilise support for Atiku

    A week after failing to realise his presidential ambition at the just concluded Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) elective presidential convention in Portharcourt, Rivers state, Governor Aminu Tambuwal on Saturday returned to Sokoto in high spirit with a resolve to ensure maximum support for former Vice President Atiku Abubakar for a landslide victory at the 2019 polls.

    ” I accept the outcome of the primary  in good fate and ready to mobilise support for our presidential candidate for victory, ” Tambuwal stated.

    The governor however warned opposition APC in the state to mind its utterances oelse he would not hesitate to expose the rots.

    According to him” when I assumed office in 2015, Sokoto elites advised and appealed to me to draw a line and begin on a clean slate of affairs and not to look back on the activities of past government. But if they choose not to guide their utterances, I will ignore the earlier call which will not make their stay comfortable in the state.”

    He described the outcome of the PDP elective convention as the will of God that he did not emerged the standard candidate of the party.

    Tambuwal while addressing supporters and well wishers at the Government House, Sokoto also thanked the delegates for their support.

    He also called on PDP supporters in the state to avoid politics of violence and promote free , fair and issue based politics while urging opposition APC to do the same and not accelerate violence in the state.

    Tambuwal explained that during his tenure,  he has been able to tame area boys with a view to promoting sanity in the polity.

    Tambuwal was received amidst warmth reception by hundreds of thousands party supporters and followers.

  • Obasanjo lobbying US for entry visa for Atiku, says APC

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has said that former President Olusegun Obasanjo has commenced moves to make the United States government with it’s alleged travel ban on PDP Presidential candidate and former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar.

    In a statement signed by the Acting National Publicity Secretary, Yekini Nabena, the party said it has credible information that Obasanjo has started lobbying the US government to issue Atiku with an entry visa.

    The statement reads “we have come across credible reports that former President Olusegun Obasanjo has made moves to secure United States entry visa for the presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Alh. Atiku Abubakar, whose candidacy he endorsed on Thursday.

    “It is learnt that that the former President who during and after leaving office insisted on Atiku’s unsuitability to govern Nigeria based on his knowledge of the latter’s extensive corrupt practices while he served as Vice President, is lobbying US authorities to withdraw the ban reportedly placed on Atiku from entering the United States following a 2005 $500,000 bribery scandal that involved Atiku, his fourth wife, Jennifer and former United States Congressman, William Jefferson.

    Read Also: I’m under pressure to leave APC – Yari

    “Recall that the former president while in office had deployed enormous resources of the country on a global dragnet coordinated by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) in getting Atiku prosecuted for corrupt enrichment and money laundering.

    “A report by the United States Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, chaired by Senator Carl Levin reported that Atiku used offshore companies to siphon millions of dollars to his fourth wife in the United States, Jennifer while still the vice president of Nigeria between 2000 and 2008.

    “The report further stated that then President Bush had on the strength of his report, barred Atiku and other corrupt politically exposed persons from being issued visa to the United States, a reason for which he has been unable to travel to the United States till date.

    “Former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s intervention in Alh.Abubakar Atiku’s ban from the United States of America is evidence of Obasanjo’s legendary hypocrisy and self-serving interest in national affairs.

  • 2019: Atiku picks Peter Obi as running mate

    Presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the 2019 elections, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar has picked a former Governor of Anambra State, Mr. Peter Obi as his running mate.

    The only official confirmation of the choice of Obi came from Mr. Ike Abonyi, the Media Adviser to the national chairman of the PDP, Prince Uche Secondus.

    Abonyi confirmed the report through a terse text message, stating “confirmed” without further comments.

    A competent source in the Atiku camp had earlier confirmed the development to our correspondent on the telephone on Friday.

    The source however pleaded not to be quoted because he did not have the mandate to speak on the matter.

    “Yes, it is true that Mr. Peter Obi has been chosen to be Atiku’s running mate”, the source said emphatically without further comments.

    The choice of Obi was said to be premised on the strong presence of the PDP in the South East zone where Obi hailed from.

    Obi was elected governor of Anambra State from 2006 to 2014 on the platform of the All Progressive Gand Alliance (APGA).

    He defected to the PDP in 2015, following a disagreement with his successor and protege, Mr. Willie Obiano who was also elected on the platform of APGA.

    Attempts by Obi to frustrate Obiano’s reelection in 2017 failed as Obiano defeated Obi’s preferred candidate, Dr. Henry Obaze Oseloka of the PDP.

    The choice of Obi was said to have been premised on the strong presence of the PDP in the South East zone. Three of the five states in the zone, Abia, Enugu and Ebonyi are under the control of the PDP.

    Imo and Anambra are under the control of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) and the APGA respectively.

    Incidentally, Anambra State where Obi hailed from is being controlled by APGA.
    Below is the full Curriculum Vitae of Peter Obi

    NAME : Mr. Peter Gregory OBI, (CON)

    DATE OF BIRTH : 19th July 1961

    PLACE OF BIRTH: Onitsha, Nigeria

    NATIONALITY: Nigerian

    MARITAL STATUS: Married with two children

    EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS ATTENDED

    · Christ the King College, Onitsha (W.A.S.C.)

    . University of Nigeria, Nsukka (B.A. Philosophy)

    · Lagos Business School, Nigeria (Chief Executive Program)

    · Harvard Business School, Boston, U.S.A. (Mid to Mid Marketing)

    · Harvard Business School, Boston, U.S.A. (Changing the Game)

    · London School of Economics (Financial Mgmt/Business Policy)

    · Columbia Business School, New York, U.S.A. (Marketing Mgmt )

    · Institute for Management Development, Switzerland (Senior Executive Program)

    · Institute for Management Development, Switzerland (Break-Through Program for CEOs)

    · Kellogg Graduate School of Management, U.S.A. (Advanced Executive Program)

    · Kellogg School of Management U.S.A. (Global Advanced Mgmt Program)

    . Oxford University: Said Business School, (Advanced Mgmt& Leadership Program)

    . Cambridge University: George Business School (Advanced Leadership Program)

    PREVIOUS POSITIONS

    · Governor, Anambra State of Nigeria (2006-2014)

    · Honorary Special Adviser to the President on Finance (till May, 2015)

    · Member, Presidential Economic Management Team (till May, 2015)

    · Vice-Chairman, Nigeria Governors’ Forum (2008-2014)

    · Chairman, South-East Governors’ Forum (2006-2014)

    . Former Chairman: Board of Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)

    · Former Chairman: Fidelity Bank Plc.

    · Former Chairman: Guardian Express Mortgage Bank, Ltd.

    · Former Chairman: Future Views Securities, Ltd.

    · Former Chairman: Paymaster Nigeria Plc.

    · Former Chairman: Next International (Nigeria) Ltd

    · Former Director: Guardian Express Bank Plc.

    · Former Director: Chams Nigeria Plc.

    · Former Director: Emerging Capital Ltd

    · Former Director: Card Centre Plc

    MEMBERSHIP OF PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONS/ORGANIZATIONS

    · Member, Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG)

    · Member, Nigerian Chartered Institute of Bankers

    · Member, British Institute of Directors (IOD)

    MEMBERSHIP OF FEDERAL GOVERNMENT COMMITTEES

    In my capacity as the Governor of Anambra State, I served as a member of:

    *Federal Government Committee on Minimum Wage

    *Federal Government Committee on Negotiation with Labour on Subsidy

    *Federal Government Committee on Mass Transit

    *Federal Government Committee on Natural Resource

    *National Economic Council Committee on Power Sector Reform

    *National Economic Council Committee on Sharing of MDGs Funds

    *National Economic Council Committee on Accurate Data on Nigeria’s Oil Import and Export

    *Agricultural Transformation Implementation Council

    *Sub-Committee on Needs Analysis of Public Universities in Nigeria

    *National Economic Council Review Committee on the Power Sector

    AWARDS & RECOGNITION

    2015: Golden Jubilee Award from Catholic Diocese of Onitsha for outstanding contribution to quality healthcare delivery in St. Charles Borromeo Hospital in particular and Anambra State in general, on the occasion of the Golden Jubilee celebration of the hospital.

    *2014: Nigerian Library Association Golden Merit Award for remarkable improvement of libraries in Anambra State, exemplified by our Government’s construction of the Kenneth Dike Digital State Library, remarkable upgrade of the Onitsha Divisional Library, and provision of library facilities in secondary schools across the State.

    *2014: Champion Newspaper Most Outstanding Igbo Man of the Decade.

    * 2014 The Voice Newspaper (Holand) Achievers Award for Outstanding Example in Leadership and Governance.

    *2013: Silver Bird Man of the Year (with Governor BabatundeFashola of Lagos State).

    *2012: Business Hallmark Newspaper Man of the Year.

    *2012: The Golden Award on Prudence – by the Methodist Church of Nigeria as the Most
    Financially Prudent Governor in Nigeria.

    * 2012: Leadership and Good Governance Award by The Ezeife Leadership Foundation Award for restoring peace and harmony to Anambra State.

    * 2012: Best Performing Governor on Immunization in South-East Nigeria – by Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

    * 2012: Outstanding Financial Planner and Manager – by the Church of Nigeria, Anglican Communion for my resourcefulness and creativity in governance.

    *2011: Zik Leadership Prize.

    *2010: ICT Governor of the Year – by the West Africa ICT Development Award.

    *2009: Champion Newspaper Nigeria’s Most Trustworthy Governor Award.

    *2009: Thisday Newspaper Most Prudent Governor in Nigeria.

    *2007: The Sun Newspaper Man of the Year Award.

    **The Nigerian MDGs Office/UNDP Best Governor in the Implementation of the MDGs in Nigeria