Tag: Babafemi Ojudu

  • Ojudu berates comparisons between Wizkid, Fela Kuti

    Ojudu berates comparisons between Wizkid, Fela Kuti

    Former senator Babafemi Ojudu has criticised comparisons between younger musicians and Fela Kuti, saying the late Afrobeat icon’s life and work remain unmatched.

    Ojudu’s comments came amid the ongoing feud between Wizkid and Seun Kuti, Fela’s son.

    Ojudu, on Facebook, described Fela as a movement, a revolution, and a conscience who stood fearlessly against military dictatorships.

    He noted that Fela’s legacy includes over 200 arrests, imprisonment, torture, and exile for fighting injustice.

    According to him, Fela’s music birthed Afrobeat, a genre now studied globally, and his impact on music and activism is still felt.

    Ojudu added that the comparisons with younger artists are misguided, emphasising Fela’s unique contributions to music and society.

    “Is it true that a Nigerian youngster said he is greater than Fela? I sincerely hope he was misquoted. Even if he were to live ten lifetimes, his art and his life could not measure up to Fela Anikulapo-Kuti. Is it in art? Is it in music? Is it in activism, courage, or originality?

    “Fela was not just a musician; he was a movement, a conscience, a revolution in human form. His music gave birth to Afrobeat, a genre now studied in universities across the world, sampled by global superstars, and performed on the world’s greatest stages. From Lagos to London, New York to Berlin, Fela’s sound reshaped global music and African identity.

    “Fela stood alone—fearless in the face of military dictatorships, unapologetic in his resistance to oppression. He used his music as a weapon against injustice, corruption, colonial mentality, and state violence. For this, he was arrested over 200 times, brutalized, imprisoned, tortured, exiled, and silenced—yet never broken.

    Read Also: Ojudu warns against import dependence, over-reliance on oil revenue

    “His mother was murdered by the state. His house, the Kalakuta Republic, was burned to the ground. His property was seized. He was flogged, beaten, and jailed from Alagbon to Panti, hounded by police and soldiers alike. Yet, after every assault, Fela returned with sharper lyrics, deeper rhythms, and more defiant truth.

    “For any young person—musician or not—to compare himself to Fela, he must first walk the corridors of Nigerian jailhouses: Lagos, Maiduguri, Benin. He must endure police cells and military tribunals. He must lose everything, go into exile, and still return with his creative spirit intact.

    “Fela was a multi-instrumentalist, a composer, bandleader, philosopher, and cultural theorist. He could play virtually every instrument in his band, wrote complex compositions lasting 15 to 30 minutes, and fused jazz, highlife, funk, Yoruba rhythms, and political poetry into something entirely original—something timeless”, he wrote in part.

    The feud started when Wizkid claimed to be a greater artist than Fela, after a trigger from Seun Kuti, who attacked his fans.

  • Ojudu warns against import dependence, over-reliance on oil revenue

    Ojudu warns against import dependence, over-reliance on oil revenue

    Former Special Adviser on Political Matters to ex-President Muhammadu Buhari, Senator Babafemi Ojudu, has cautioned that Nigeria’s heavy dependence on imports for food and manufactured goods, coupled with over-reliance on crude oil revenue, leaves the country dangerously exposed to global price shocks and foreign exchange scarcity.

    Speaking at the 14th Annual Symposium of the Muslim Students Society of Nigeria held on Sunday at the Obafemi Awolowo Civic Centre, Ado-Ekiti, Ojudu said these structural weaknesses amplify volatility, fuel insecurity, and undermine social cohesion.

    He warned that rising inflation, unemployment, and inequality create fertile ground for unrest and criminal recruitment, recalling how economic collapse and hunger once triggered violent protests in Nepal — a scenario he said could play out in Nigeria if urgent steps are not taken.

    Read Also: Tinubu’s aide Ojudu to lead discussion at Ekiti annual roundtable

    To avert a crisis, Ojudu recommended prudent fiscal policies to cut waste, broaden the tax net, and prioritize infrastructure and human capital. He called for economic diversification into agriculture, ICT, manufacturing, and the creative industries, alongside building reserves in food, foreign exchange, and energy.

    The former presidential aide also stressed the need for strict anti-corruption enforcement, the rule of law, and a professional civil service to restore investor confidence. He further urged the expansion of social safety nets through conditional cash transfers, youth job schemes, vocational training, and subsidized healthcare and education.

    Delivering a lecture at the event, Professor Femi Saibu noted that insurgency in the North-East, banditry in the North-West, and separatist agitations in the South-East reflect systemic exclusion. He said Nigeria faces a defining choice: “We can either allow inequality to deepen and internal aggression to fester, or we can rise together with vision, values, and vigor. This is not a rhetorical moment. It is a moral reckoning.”

     “The success stories we have explored-from NSIP to ECID, from LSETF to NELFUND-are not dreams. They are proof of possibility. They show that government intervention can work, that civil society can mobilize, that faith can inspire, and that youth can lead. They affirm that Nigeria is not condemned to inequality and despair. We are capable of building a nation where opportunity is shared, dignity is protected, and peace is sustained.”

    Also, in his lecture titled: The Dwindling Fortunes of the Nigerian Economy amidst Escalated Conflicts: Impacts and Challenges Ahead of the 2027 General Election, Dr Musefiu Adeleke of the Bank of Industry said that the dwindling fortunes of the country’s economy and escalating conflict present a serious challenge, noting that it also offers an opportunity for reflection and collective action.

    “As we approach the 2027 general elections, the choices of our leaders, the resilience of our institutions, and the participation of our citizens, especially our youths, will determine whether Nigeria sinks deeper into crisis or rises toward prosperity and stability.”

    In his welcome address, the Chairman of the occasion and a retired Permanent Secretary in Ekiti State, Alhaji Ganiyu Titilope, said that lack of foresight and proper planning for the future has turned a booming economy into a “resilient economy”.

    “Today, the majority of Nigerians live below the poverty line and struggle daily to make ends meet. A hungry man, they say, is an angry man. The consequence of our past negligence is haunting us today, making internal peace elusive in Nigeria. The country is battling, on many fronts, with internal insurrection, ranging from religio-political conflicts to tribal conflicts.”

  • Ojudu’s shameless life of lies and blackmail

    Ojudu’s shameless life of lies and blackmail

    By Omisakin Iluyomade

    Viewing Babafemi Ojudu’s latest media outing few days ago, my first reaction was to laugh deliriously at the tomfoolery of the proverbial “shigidi” (Yoruba idol) daring anyone to a bathing contest in the river. It is like the futility of a pinch of salt claiming superiority over a glass of water.

    But, after further reflection, I think what Ojudu actually deserves is pity. He is battling the trauma of idleness and now desperately seeks relevance, even if that means telling self-deprecating lies in attempt to inflate his political worth.

    That is my summary of his performance in a current viral videos where he makes a lot of fictive assertions at the expense of the immediate past President Muhammadu Buhari and his successor, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

    To start with, just consider this stark contraction: the Ekiti-born journalist-turned-politician declares that Buhari as president “did not have a vision”. Yet, this is the same man in whose government Ojudu had served as “Political Adviser” for eight years! Seriously? The question then is: why did he remain in the government of a leader who lacked vision?

    Of course, the answer is blowing in the wind. Ojudu is only a political hustler looking for what to eat. Truly, what a rabbit will eat never allows it to reason or understand the meaning of dignity and integrity. 

    Read Also: Why we had to remove fuel subsidy, by Tinubu

    Another instance of Ojudu’s shameless contradiction: he claims that he and other Asiwaju’s “political disciples” in 2007 persuaded the ACN leader from taking an offer of “Finance Minister” from the PDP administration of President Umar Yar’Adua. Seriously? At this point, I couldn’t help laughing again in Ojudu’s native Ekiti dialect. The lie in this claim can easily be established from the fact that at that material time, Ojudu was the executive editor of The News/PM News. It was not until 2010 that he resigned to bid for the senatorial ticket of Ekiti Central.

    In fact, but for Asiwaju Tinubu, there is no way Ojudu, a political lightweight, could have won the ticket against better known and far more accomplished journalist like Dr. Dele Alake.

    So, isn’t it shameful that a supposed journalist/editor could now claim to be a “political disciple” to the National Leader of Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) around 2007? It is characters like Ojudu that are giving journalism a bad name in Nigeria! Where is journalism ethics?

    In the early 2000s, the earlier victim of Ojudu’s lies and blackmail was “Oshoko” himself, Ayodele Fayose. Using his media platform, Ojudu had hounded then Governor Niyi Adebayo to a political defeat in 2003. Once Fayose came in, Ojudu tried to hijack the new administration. So chummy was their relationship initially that Fayose once alleged that Ojudu handled the job of sewing the “Aso Ofi” (hand-sewn traditional attire) he wore on his inauguration on May 29, 2003. Fayose only started to resist when Ojudu’s interference, among others became too excessive. So bitter was their falling-out that “Oshoko” started calling him “Oju-dudu” (the black face). Predictably, Ojudu launched a relentless media witch-hunt against Fayose in retaliation until he was controversially impeached in 2006.

    Now, taking about the scramble for Ekiti Central Senatorial ticket in 2011, not a few observers believed that Asiwaju “forsook” Alake, a long-standing and time-tested loyalist, for Ojudu, who soon showed his true colour when he failed to gain ACN’s nomination for second term in 2015.

    Of course, by 2014, Asiwaju could not save Ojudu from his constituents in Ekiti who were tired of his arrogance, insolence and  incompetence.  Once Opeyemi Bamidele got the nomination, Ojudu suddenly became “radicalised” overnight against Asiwaju. It is a mark of better judgment and  performance on the part of Bamidele that he is today in his third term in office and also the Majority Leader at the senate.

    After all said and done, the true test of character is what someone does in the face of great temptation. Note that when Alake lost out in the Ekiti powerplay of 2011, he never switched camp to PDP nor launch a media war against Asiwaju. Not Ojudu who, after losing the Ekiti primaries in 2014, lobbied and lobbied and was rehabilitated with the position of “Political Adviser” under Buhari in 2015 and was posted to Vice President Yemi Osinbajo’s office. Thus began his vicious and relentless campaign of calumny against Tinubu.

    In retrospect, it was perhaps a strategic move by Buhari that he did not keep a political snake like Ojudu close, but offloaded him to Osinbajo. Of course, everyone still remembers the despicable length Ojudu went in 2022 in a desperate effort to discredit Tinubu and assassinate his character in the build-up to the APC presidential primaries, calling him unprintable names, even though Asiwaju is yet the same man who had made him politically in 2011.

    Perhaps, what Ojudu did mostly for eight years under Osinbajo was bearing false tales and idle gossips. And finding or creating enemies for Osinbajo. In fact, not a few believe he was one of those who kept egging on Osinbajo to the political disgrace he suffered at the APC primaries in June 2022. It is a measure of the quality of “political advice” Ojudu gave that his principal, a sitting vice president, was beaten silly by a cabinet minister at the APC primaries. 

    Ever a sham political strategist, Ojudu was so confident of Osinbajo’s landslide victory at the APC primaries that he boastfully told an interviewer in a viral video prior that he would retire to the farm if Tinubu ever won and became president. Shameless enough, he is yet to fulfil that pledge, almost two years after Tinubu’s inauguration. Had Ojudu truly retired to his much-touted cassava farm, perhaps public interest would be better served. At least, with a promise of better food security for Nigeria, instead of his current toxic career of lying and revisionism.

    Meanwhile, who will remind Ojudu of his 2022 pledge to retire to the farm if Tinubu became president?

    • Chief Omisakin Iluyomade, a political analyst, is based in Ibadan.

  • Ojudu withdraws from Ekiti APC Primary, accuses Oyegun of Injustice

    All Progressives Congress (APC) governorship aspirant in Ekiti State, Senator Babafemi Ojudu, has withdrawn from the primary election scheduled for Saturday.

    Ojudu who addressed a news conference on Thursday described the party’s primary as “an unfair contest in which the national leadership wanted to force an unpopular aspirant on the people.”

    He accused the APC National Chairman, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, perpetrating injustice in the choice of the flag bearer in Ekiti and frustrating moves to have a transparent process.

    Responding to a question, Ojudu said: “I am not stepping down for anybody, I am withdrawing. I will leave (my) delegates to their choice.”

    According to him, “it is part of the complicity of NWC to allow an indicted person to contest for the party’s governorship ticket.”

    Ojudu claimed that Oyegun “vehemently opposed” an advice offered by the aspirants for the use of Option A4 to resolve the primary election logjam.

    Read Also: Breaking News: Ojudu withdraws from Ekiti governorship race

    The journalist-turned politician clarified that he was not stepping down for any aspirant but withdrawing from the race “to safeguard the future of our children and great grandchildren.”

    Ojudu said: “From what has happened since May 5 to date, it does without saying that this is an unfair contest where the NWC Chairman has clearly demonstrated that he does not care what happens to our dear party now and in the nearest future.

    “We saw a Chairman who has conspired with one of the aspirants in the race to unleash mayhem on others, wreak havoc and violence on ordinary citizens and exposed our state to great embarrassment on national television.

    “We saw an aspirant so unpopular to the extent that delegates called him unprintable names at the voting arena now being imposed on our people, not minding if this means we lose this state forever.

    “We do not believe in engaging in unfair contest and I am not ready to step on blood to get to power.  As I have reiterated at different times in the course of the campaign, this was never about me.

    “It was not about an ambition but a mission to give a new lease of life to Ekiti State and the people. It was about safeguarding the future of our children, our grandchildren, great grandchildren and even generations yet unborn.

    “Therefore, thus injustice perpetrated against Ekiti people by NWC Chairman cannot be allowed to stand. This is why the fight will continue, not as an aspirant but as a party reformer.”

  • Breaking News: Ojudu withdraws from Ekiti governorship race

    A member of the seventh Senate, Senator Babafemi Ojudu, has withdrawn from the race for the All Progressives Congress (APC) governorship ticket.

    Ojudu said he took the action because the National Working Committee (NWC) has failed to ensure a transparent process leading to the emergence of an acceptable candidate.

    He accused the APC National Chairman, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, of promoting injustice and favouring a particular aspirant.

    Details later.

  • Why I wrote my Will at 28 -Presidential Adviser Babafemi Ojudu

    Senator Babafemi Ojudu is the Special Adviser to the President on Political Affairs and also a gubernatorial aspirant in Ekiti State on the platform of the All Progressives Congress. In this interview with our Deputy Editor, Nation’s Capital, YOMI ODUNUGA, the journalist, activist and philanthropist speaks on his mission in running for the governorship of the state, noting that President Muhammadu Buhari’s battle against corruption is yielding results even if the agents of the monster are giving him a tough time. Excerpts:

    There were claims in some quarters that you are in this for some form of political bargain because your party may end up with a consensus candidate. Are you in the race for governorship  for bargain or is this for real?

    How is that possible when we have put all our plans in place? I’m planning to work and we have set up mobilisation for our group. We mean business. We are convinced that we are capable of building the new Ekiti and make Ekiti a place of example for the rest of the country. This is no joke and I keep telling people that it is not an ambition for me but a mission to rescue Ekiti, rebuild and show the world the possibilities in that state.

    In spite of Governor Ayo Fayose’s order that your posters and bill boards should be removed for allegedly failing to pay required fees, you were still able to pull an impressive crowd. Was that a rented crowd as being peddled by some persons?

    I couldn’t have rented the crowd. I did not rent any crowd. If you look at the video and how enthusiastic they were, you will know they were largely members of our group, Ero Rebirth Organisation. We have a group present in all the wards, all the towns in Ekiti State. We have 177 coordinators in the wards and 60 coordinators in the local governments. We have headquarters in Ado-Ekiti. We have been working on it. We also have branches in the major cities in US, Britain, South Africa, Australia and Ghana. We have a branch in Abuja here, Lagos, Port Harcourt. So we have people, who came from all over these places.

    You have highly educated people but in spite of that, the state is still backward, how do you change that narrative?

    Let’s diagnose the problem. People say Ekiti people are learned. Yes. When you go to school and become an accountant, engineer, medical doctor, there is nothing to do other than to move out of Ekiti to look out for greener pastures in Lagos, Maryland, Washington, Atlanta, Germany and everywhere. Those left at home are people struggling to eke out a living—you have the civil servants, the teachers. So, yes, we are educated but a lot of people who are doing well are not in Ekiti State. The few who are living in Ekiti are civil servants and teachers, whose salaries have not been paid in 12 months. They are perpetually poor; they can’t pay their rent or medical bills. They can’t do anything for themselves. Someone who has not got salary for 10 months, what will he make of his life? Won’t the children go to school? The graduates can’t find employment, they don’t have a hope, the infrastructure are dilapidated while schools are run down. So there is no life. I have been in this government for more than two years now, whether it’s Peoples Democratic Party or All Progressives Congress, I have seen what the governments have done. Some of them are very creative and intelligent. Look at Kebbi, for instance, all the lands have been turned to rice and wheat farms. But, in Ekiti, nothing has happened. Fayose waits for the end of the month, take his share from the state’s share of the Federation Account and everybody can go to hell. If you pay Paris fund, he is just gallivanting around. He has turned himself to one project governor which is to criticise Buhari, abuse Buhari. That has been his only agenda. So when you get to Ekiti state, you see suffering, grief and hunger. You see hopelessness and that’s the problem we are facing now and trying to find solutions to.

    How do you change that?

    First, you have to ensure there is productivity. Wherever there is no productivity, there can’t be wealth creation. We have a basic formula to resolve the problem in Ekiti. Yes we are educated but knowledge without enterprise can lead to poverty. We want to add enterprise plus knowledge to create wealth and development. You cannot wake up and go into heavy industries. Land area in Ekiti is very fertile. Less than 10 per cent of land in Ekiti has been cultivated. I have done a research on that. We have done research on that and calculated what is available as land space. So we want to move people back to agriculture so that they can farm and produce heavily.

    When they produce, you can then find private investors to come and do processing as it’s happening in Kebbi. In Ekiti, we have five dams and they are not used to provide water for the people and not used for agriculture. They are just lying there fallow. With those bodies of water, we can grow maize all year round, vegetables and tomato; with market in Lagos, Ibadan even Abuja, we will make good money. We are not talking of cutlass and hoe agriculture but mechanised farming. This will, firstly, move large number of our young people to the farm using tractors and other farm machineries to do agriculture. If you look at history, you realise that 40 per cent of revenue generated in the western region that Chief Obafemi  Awolowo used to build free education and develop the region came from Ekiti. I am talking of cocoa and the cocoa producers are still there now but they are old. Initially, we were producing 80 pods per tree but currently producing 4 pods per tree. We want to review that and focus on agricultural development. The entire south of Ekiti State is a cocoa belt. If we have that now, we will be swimming in wealth. So we are going to really encourage the renewal of those farms and see how we can renew cocoa farms estate.

    Unlike Awolowo, we won’t export the raw cocoa but we will dry and bag it. We will keep the pod here and ask the private sector to establish processing plants that will process them and ship them out. It will add more money than shipping them out raw.

    So basically, within two years of being in government, we will have established the estate in every local government where you can rest, provide electricity and modern technologies such that young people can stay in the villages and live a very good life. If they want to watch football competition, they can do that after farming and then they can be productive. You don’t see youths who just walk across the streets. Every young man today in Ekiti State is a politician. Many of them are already on drugs, many have become thugs.

    The incumbent governor has both political and financial power, how will you wrestle power from such a person?   

    Over the last two years, people have seen that it’s a deceit; he doesn’t mean what he says but just deceiving them. You say you a friend to the common man, yet you are not paying their salaries. The stomach infrastructure you used to campaign, you no longer give the rice anymore. This last Christmas, we were waiting for him to give them rice and chicken but because he knows he would no longer contest the election, he didn’t give them. People now see that it’s a deceit. When you look at his lifestyle, it betrays what he preaches. You went to Benue State and donated money yet you didn’t pay the salaries of your people. You built a two kilometers bridge in a town where there is no traffic or water. He has cut the salaries and allowances of Obas in the state. Everything is just going wrong; so they are just waiting for that day to vote in APC.

    Outside politics and journalism, you are also known as a philanthropist. Were all these tailored towards the realization of your gubernatorial ambition?

    As you said, they know me and I don’t hide anything from them. What is paramount to me is the development of that state. I even told them, I have a 3-bedroom bungalow in Ado-Ekiti. If I’m elected, I’m staying in that bungalow to make a statement that we have to cut all of these wastes attached to governance in Nigeria.

    How will you rate your chance within the APC?

    My chance is very bright. I will tell you this: there is a set of people in Ekiti who says because of what we have seen in Fayose, who came back, we are not going to accept that again. You can’t seek re-election so you can decide not to do anything. You can just decide to come and get your retirement benefit. So, there are elements who said no. There are also those who, because of their antecedents, have offended Obas, students, party men or the opposition. So people are waiting. These people are carrying a lot of baggage. There is nobody in that state who did not know my role since 1999. If a government is not doing well, if one becomes so troublesome to the extent of beating up Obas, I will go there and organise his impeachment. I organized the impeachment of Fayose in 2006. In 2011, he contested against me and I defeated him. I had 68, 000 votes, he had 21, 000 votes.

    So they know my antecedents, they know that I’m forthright and I have never stolen money. My name has not shown up in any theft or embezzlement. I have never been investigated as a public official in my life. I live within my means; I don’t promise what I can’t do, I have an antecedent. They know my role in bringing about democracy in Nigeria. So, my credentials stand out.

    How do you mix these three- journalism, activism and being philanthropist?

    It has to do with having a genuine heart.  Whatever I do, I add passion to it. I have never been investigated. Whatever I don’t have passion for, I stay away. Then I want to say that I’m not motivated by money. If you say Femi Ojudu, there is money two kilometres away from here to be taken; I’m not going to take it. If you call me and say a young man or woman is being oppressed 10 kilometres away and you are the one who can save the person, I will run with all the energy I can summon to save the person. That’s the kind of person I am.

    So when you talk about activism, yes. I am passionate about human rights, good governance and democracy as well as freedom of the press. It is passion. The same thing with governance, I believe that this country can be better if we all decide to say no way to corruption.

    You are the Special Adviser to the President on Political Affairs, would you say this administration has done enough to tame the corruption monster with the kind of stories we read daily about what is happening in the system?

    Let me tell you, we have all benefitted from corruption. All of us in this country and that’s what this administration is taking away from us. If I were SA, Political Affairs to a former President, you won’t come and see me here. For this interview, you won’t come and see me here. I will take a suite and have all of the champagne and foods for you to drink from. And when you are going, I’ll say Yomi, take $10,000. I won’t know I’m giving you anything and when you get home, assuming you are doing a construction project in your house, you may send $5, 000 for it. If you have a girlfriend, you give her $1, 000. So, it tickles down. That is how people benefit. You are a jeans maker, you are not producing anything but by just knowing Mr. President, the Minister, 100s of millions of dollars come to you and you buy private jet, hire crew, two pilots and gallivanting all over. You come to Abuja, you buy a mansion and yet you are not producing but taking from the state.

    Then, if somebody comes and says I’m taking away all these, you can no longer pay your pilot. You can’t service that jet, you can’t pay the insurance, and your girlfriends can no longer travel first class abroad, so she abandoned you. Things are just collapsing. You can’t just maintain the house you bought, you can’t pay the school fees of your child you registered in a very expensive school in America, there is no way you won’t hate the man but the man didn’t hate you. The man is saying let us use the resources of this country for the benefit of our people. You are in this town. When I was in the Senate, I observed how pastors, bishops, emirs, alfas visited the villa. When they were going, they put a bag of $200, 000 in trunk of their cars. If you now have a president that says all I can give you when you come is bitter kola and tom-tom, and a handshake when you are leaving, there is no way you won’t be angry.

    Some years ago, you see a girl who just completed youth corps using an Iphone worth N500,000. The hair is from Brazil, which cost N50,000 and rented an apartment in Asokoro for N20 million per annum, riding a Range Rover. You then ask where she got all that kind of money. It is from corruption. All of that has stopped. I am not saying that corruption has been totally eradicated but largely, it has been blocked. And that is why many are angry. That is why they want Buhari dead, and out of government. They want the country to collapse and corruption to thrive. But the man said, whatever you do, I must get this country going in such a manner that majority of Nigerians benefit from the resources.  So when you are looking for why people hate Buhari, that is the reason.

    People will like to know your philosophy of life? With your activism under the late General Sani Abacha to your interventions in the fiery politics of your state, is it right to describe you as a fatalist?

    (Laughs) Fatalism, for me I will say whatever will be will be. Just believe in yourself. I lost my sense of fear perhaps at the age of 25. I wrote my first Will at the age of 28 and I have been updating it since. So I don’t sense danger. I can trek the streets without policeman. I can eat anywhere without any fear of food poisoning. If you poison me, I die and so what? What’s the big deal about dying? If you say fatalism in that sense, fine. See it is when you panic or be apprehensive that you cannot achieve your dreams. When as young men, we confronted Abacha, people said they would kill you. And so what? We were in danger, arrested, detained but we were not killed. We survived. We did what giants could not do. In this same way, I will go into this, confront all of the giants and survive. If in the process anything happens to me, so be it. Somebody else will carry on from there.

  • Forgery: I’m not witnessing against Saraki, others as Buhari’s aide – Ojudu

    Forgery: I’m not witnessing against Saraki, others as Buhari’s aide – Ojudu

    The Special Adviser to the President on Political Matters, Senator Babafemi Ojudu, has said his role as a witness in the case involving the Senate President, Bukola Saraki and his deputy, Ike Ekweremadu, for allegedly forging the Senate Standing Rules, has to do with his membership of the 7th Senate and as one of the conveners of the Unity Forum that called the police attention to the matter.

    Ojudu said his involvement in the case has nothing to do with his current position as the Special Adviser to the President, but as a member of the Unity Forum.

    The Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Mr. Abubakar Malami, has charged Saraki and Ekweremadu for alleged forgery and conspiracy before an Abuja Federal High Court.

    Also arraigned in court are the immediate past clerk of the National Assembly, Alhaji Salisu Maikasuwa and the deputy clerk of the house, Mr. Benard Efeturi.

    Ojudu is one of the witnesses in the case.

    He said: “My statement and other witnesses’ statement were taken months before my appointment. As a member of the Unity Forum, I am one of those who worked for Senator Ahmed Lawan as the preferred candidate for the Senate Presidency in the June 9, 2015 election.

    “There are three groups of senators, they are: the Unity Forum, Like Minds and the Non-Aligned. The Unity Forum comprises both serving and non-serving senators. I am an active member, being a senator in the 7th Senate from 2011 to 2015.”

    Stressing that he was at the Senate for four years, Ojudu said that at no time were the rules amended.

    He added: “So tampering with the rules by the current Senate was seen as a misnomer by us and that was why we petitioned the police.”

    “The statement we did to the police on the matter predated my appointment and that of Senator Ita Enang. It will therefore be preposterous for anyone to classify me as representing the Presidency on the matter.”

  • Osinbajo urges religious tolerance among Nigerians

    The Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, has appealed to Nigerians, irrespective of creed or religious affiliations to co-exist in peace and understanding.

    According to him, the task of building a viable nation cannot be achieved in an atmosphere of communal and religious intolerance, as it is being witnessed in different parts in the country.

    The vice president spoke on Thursday in Abuja while he was being honoured with an award by the Muslim Lawyers’ Association of Nigeria (MULAN) at the Sheraton Hotels and Towers.

    The Senior Special Assistant to the President on Political Matters, Senator Babafemi Ojudu, who represented Prof. Osinbajo at the event, also urged Nigerians to be patient with the administration.

    Ojudu said the task of rebuilding the country transcends religion, pointing out that it is instructive enough to see the vice president who is a Pastor being recognized and honoured by Muslim Lawyers Association.

    The presidential aide enjoined Nigerians to shun acts capable of plunging the nation into needless orgy of bloodbath and destruction of property.

    He observed that the country had gone astray for too long and that it takes sincerity, commitment and patriotism on the part of everyone to put things right.

  • Senator defies police ban on protests

    Senator defies police ban on protests

    Senator Babafemi Ojudu yesterday defied the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Commissioner of Police, Mr. Mbu Joseph Mbu’s ban on the ‘Bring Back Our Girls’ protests. He led protesters to the popular Unity Fountain to demand the release of over 200 Chibok schoolgirls abducted by Boko Haram on April 15.

    Ojudu, who clutched a placard with the inscription: #Bringbackourgirls”, said it was dictatorial and illegal for anybody to ban protests in a democracy.

    He protested with some of his legislative aides, who also carried placards.

    A placard held by one of his aides reads: “#The right to dissent is inalienable.”

    Ojudu said he was out to protest Mbu’s illegal ban order on the ‘Bring Back Our Girls’ campaigners, insisting that even President Goodluck Jonathan does not have the power to violate the inalienable rights of Nigerians to stage peaceful protests.

    He said it was erroneous to say that the protests to bring back the abducted girls was being sponsored by the opposition.

    Jonathan, he said, would not have become Acting President without protests by Nigerians in 2010.

    He said: “I am here this morning to solidarise with the women of Nigeria who are protesting the abduction of more than 200 girls in Chibok.

    “Yesterday, I picked up the story that the Police Commissioner in Abuja has banned the protest and I said to myself, this must not be allowed to stand.

    “I was originally scheduled to be in Sokoto this morning to address a conference of top civil servants, I had to call it off to engage in this symbolic action this morning to solidarise with the women.

    “It is our right to protest. Our right to protest is guaranteed by the Constitution of this country and it is also affirmed by several rulings of the highest court in the land.

    “Nobody, nobody, either a policeman or the President has the right to abridge the inalienable rights of Nigerians to protest.

    “I want to say boldly that Jonathan today is a product of protest. I was here in 2010 three times with Prof. Soyinka, Pastor Tunde Bakare and several other patriotic Nigerians to protest so that the right of Jonathan as Vice President to assume the position of Acting President could be affirmed.

    “We protested. We ensured that the Constitution of the country was enforced at that time. Why should he then, just because he is President decide to abridge our rights to protest?

    “Protest is a legitimate action all over the world. Anywhere in the world where there is democracy, protest is a legitimate action and that is exactly why I am here.”

    Asked whether his action was meant to dare the police, Ojudu said it was, adding: “I am daring the police. I am saying that I am a Senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. I know the Law and I know the implications of my actions.

    “I am saying that the Constitution of Nigeria which is the ultimate law of Nigeria affirms the right to protest. So what the man has done is illegal. He has committed an  illegality and his illegality must not be allowed to stand.

    “We are not in a dictatorial regime. We are in a democratic regime and we must all behave as democrats.

    “If we do allow this to stand we are walking into a dictatorship. But it must not be allowed to stand. Nigerians have the right to protest. They have the right to protest things they did not agree with.

    “Why should anybody in his right senses say that people should not complain that more than 200 girls have been taken away since all these weeks and somebody would say don’t go and protest?

    If it had been their own daughters or children would they have said nobody should protest? Why did Jonathan as Vice President in 2010 ask us not to come and protest in Abuja here?

    “They actively encouraged people to come to Abuja here to protest and we protested. It is now the turn of somebody else, you are now saying they cannot protest. I am saying that I have the right under the law like every other Nigerian apart from my being a Senator.

    “Every single Nigerian has the right to protest whatever action that has been carried out by the government that they did not agree with.”

    He repudiated the Minister of Information Labaran Maku’s claim that the protesters were sponsored by the opposition.

    Ojudu said: “Does anybody need to sponsor this protest? Anybody who is a human being, any decent person would be outraged by the abduction of more than 200 girls.

    “Is the All Progressives Congress (APC) sponsoring Obama’s wife or all the groups across the world that are protesting today? Are they all members of APC?

    “Any right-thinking human being must be outraged and do something about this situation. We must not allow ourselves to be cowed.

    “We must not allow ourselves to be blackmailed. Whether I am APC or no APC. There was no APC between 1992 and 1998 for God’s sake when constantly I was writing and protesting against military regime in Nigeria.”

    He urged the women to return to the park and continue their protests because nobody can gain victory without struggle.

    Ojudu described the protest ban as illegal, unjust and immoral, adding: “For anybody to say they should not protest is very wrong under the law, it is wrong in morality and it is unjust.

     

  • Abducted students: Senate raises committee to meet Jonathan

    Abducted students: Senate raises committee to meet Jonathan

    The Senate has constituted a 22-man committee to meet President Goodluck Jonathan over the abducted 234 female students in Borno State.
    Senate President, David Mark, would lead 21 other Senators to the meeting with the President.
    The Senate had on Tuesday unanimously resolved to send a delegation to the President over the lingering Boko Haram insurgency in the country, especially the abduction of 234 Senior Secondary School students of the Federal Government Girls College, Chibok in Borno State.
    Senator Olubunmi Adetunmbi, representing Ekiti North had during a debate on the floor of the Senate on Tuesday suggested that a delegation of the upper chamber meet with the President over the worrisome situation.
    Mark, on Wednesday announced the names of 21 Senators who will accompany him on the mission to the President.
    The meeting is expected to take place at the Aso Rock Villa on WWednesday night.
    The listed lawmakers include those from the troubled states of Adamawa, Borno and Yobe and they are Senators Boluwaji Kunlere, Babafemi Ojudu, Zainab Kure, Alkali Jajere, James Manager, Helen Esuene, Chris Anyanwu, Ali Ndume, Ahmed Zannah, Mai’na Ma’aji Lawan, Nenadi Usman, Mohammed Magoro, and Emmanuel Bwacha.
    Others are – Ahmed Lawan, , Barnabas Gemade, Sola Adeyeye, Bindowo Jibrilla, Ehigie Uzamere, Bello Tukur, Bukar Abba Ibrahim, and Eyinnaya Abaribe.
    Mark while announcing the list said: “You will all recalled that we agreed to a suggestion by one of the distinguished Senators during our debate on the motion on the abducted girls on Tuesday that a delegation of the Senate should meet with Mr. President on the issue.
    “I have called the President (Goodluck Jonathan), on phone and he said we should come by 10pm on Wednesday night. I will suggest that those concerned should come to my residence so that we can go to the villa in a bus or two.”
    It was gathered that the parley would enable the executive and the legislature, exchange ideas on how best to rescue the abducted school girls out of the hands of their abductors and reunite them with their parents.