Tag: Baraje

  • Baraje: I’m going back to PDP

    Former leader of the Reformed All Progressives Congress (R-APC) Abubakar Baraje has said he would return to the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    The former PDP National Chairman said he would formally declare for the party in his ward in Ilorin, the Kwara State capital.

    Baraje, who addressed reporters at the sideline of the graduation ceremony of the Baraje Centre for Arabic and Islamic Studies in Ilorin, said:

    “If I tell you where I belong now, I am telling you because you asked me, but my formal declaration is coming up in a few days at my own ward. It is being arranged by my people.

    “That means where my leader goes is where I go. I belong to the party that has made me and a party that has given me in-road into the politics of this country.

    “I belong to the PDP and I attended the PDP meeting at Yar’Adua Centre in Abuja some two months ago. There I made a statement that went viral and I think that was very indicative of where I belong. In very few days now you will hear I am in my ward declaring for PDP along with my supporters.”

    On Senate President Bukola Saraki’s presidential ambition, Baraje said: “As a reminder, Senate President Bukola Saraki has been trying his luck on being the president of this country since 2011. He withdrew for the then candidate Goodluck Jonathan. In 2015, he also withdrew for the President Muhammadu Buhari. So for somebody who has been nursing that kind of ambition, is it not right for such person to come forward again?

    “This present president came forward for four times before clinching it. Did anybody ask whether he was right or wrong? Totally, I am in his support. Whatever Nigeria is looking for is in him and what we are looking for is only a candidate that will unite Nigeria.

    “He has the right; the fact that he is the Senate President does not stop him from aspiring to become the president.”

    On the planned removal of Saraki, he said: “I am not a senator, but I am a party leader and a politician. As a politician, you don’t just sit down without educating yourself. I have read the Constitution and whenever, there is any controversy about any issue, I read the Constitution. I have gone through the relevant sections, particularly on the issue of impeachment, and the constitution makes me understand that only the senators can elect and remove their president. The Constitution also stipulates the offences he must commit to warrant removal…”

  • Photo: Saraki, Secondus, ortom others at Baraje’s mother’s burial

    The national chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Uche Secondus, senate president, Bukola Saraki and other dignitries were in Kwara state on Wednesday for the fidau of the deceased mother of former nPDP chair, Alhaji Abubakar Baraje.

    The governors present were Nyesom Wike, Aminu Tambuwal, Alh. Abubakar Kawu Baraje, Samuel Ortom, Abdulfatah Ahmed.

    Others dignitaries at the fidau were Senators Barnabas Gemade, Peter Nwoboshi, Speaker, Kwara State House of Assembly, Rt. Hon. Ali Ahmad.

     

  • Ortom, Wike storm Ilorin for Baraje’s mother’s fidau

    Meet Saraki

    Some governors of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) stormed Ilorin, Kwara State, on Wednesday for the fidau prayer of late mother of former nPDP chairman, Alhaji Abubakar Baraje.

    The governors on the trip were Samuel Ortom (Benue), Nyesom Wike (Rivers) and Abdulfatah Ahmed (Kwara).

    Others dignitaries at the fidau prayer were the Deputy National Chairman of the APC (North), Lawan Shuaib and his South counterpart, Niyi Adebayo, Senators Barnabas Gemade and Shabba Lafiagi, members of the Kwara State House of Assembly, representatives of the Emir of Ilorin, Arewa Youth Consultative Forum and members of the Kwankwansiya in the state, among others.

    Sokoto State Governor, Aminu Tambuwal, PDP National Chairman, Uche Secondus and former Governor of Jigawa State, Sule Lamido who were not at the fidau prayer joined the dignitaries in Ilorin.

    The governors, it was gathered later met with Senate President, Bukola Saraki, at his home in the Kwara state capital.

    The Spokesman of the PDP, Kola Ologbondiyan, said it was a meeting of like minds.

     

     

  • Saraki, Dogara, Kwankwaso, Baraje, others form R-APC

    Aggrieved members of the newPeoples Democratic Party in the All Progressives Congress (APC) yesterday made good their threat to factionalise the party, with the emergence of the Reformed-All Progressives Congress (R-APC).

    The group, at a press conference at the Sheraton Hotel and Towers, Abuja, announced Alhaji Buba Galadima as its National Chairman, Dr. Fatai Atanda (Oyo State) as National Secretary and Kazeem Afegbua (Edo State) as National Publicity Secretary.

    Galadima told reporters that the decision to form the R-APC was a fallout of the APC  congress, which he described as null and void due to the violations of the party’s constitution.

    Describing the APC under the leadership of President Muhammadu Buhari as “rudderless” and “incompetent”,  Galadima said the president’s highhandedness showed in his various attempts to shut out members of the nPDP even after they had table their grievances, giving him the latitude to discuss with them the best way forward.

    He said the R-APC remained the authentic party and does not need to approach the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) for registration, adding that anyone who feels uncomfortable with the arrangement can go to court.

    He also said Senate President Bukola Saraki and House Speaker Yakubu Dogara are key members of the R-APC.

    Galadima described the change promised by the APC as a “fake change”, adding that the RAPC would bring real change in the 2019 elections under his authentic leadership.

    “We are saying that we are the authentic leaders if the APC, if anybody disputes that, let him go to court, we will meet him there. Do the  Senate President and the Speaker belong to any party? If they were members of any of the four parties (that formed the APC) you mentioned, it means they are part of this.

    Speaking on Senator Rabiu Kwankwaso’s membership, Alhaji Kawu Baraje said: “Rabiu Kwankwoso is very much with this group. We were together when the national officers’ names were being put together and we held final meetings on the address of today. So there is no cause for alarm.”

    Galadima noted that the incident in Kwara State where three leaders of the senatorial zones denounced the APC yesterday was just a tip of the iceberg as more people would soon join the R-APC.

    His words: “You will recall that in the build-up to the 2015 general elections, some political parties and groups came together, and formed a brand new political party, the  APC. This merger was based on the strong belief that Nigeria had come of age, but was severely underperforming and unable to meet its potentials for good governance. The Nigerian people entrusted power to the APC based on its promises and potentials.

    “We are sad to report that after more than three years of governance, our hopes have been betrayed, our expectations completely dashed. The APC has run a rudderless, inept and incompetent government that has failed to deliver good governance to the Nigerian people. It has rather imposed dictatorship, impunity, abuse of power, complete abdication of constitutional and statutory responsibilities, infidelity to the rule of law and constitutionalism. It has failed to ensure the security and welfare of our people and elevated nepotism to unacceptable height. The APC has failed to deliver on its key promises to the nation. There is no evidence of any  political will to reverse the decline of our party while leaders who have created these circumstances continue to behave as if Nigerians owe our party votes as a matter of right.

    “The APC government has been a monumental disaster, even worse than the government it replaced. The political party that was a vehicle for enthroning the government was rendered powerless by manipulations and complete lack of due process in its operations.

    “The last straw was the Congresses and Convention of the APC held recently. The Congresses were intensely disputed as it was conducted with impunity, total disregard for due process, disregard for the party Constitution and naked display of power and practices that have no place in a party we all worked very hard to put in place.

    “There are countless cases in courts all over the country challenging the legality of congresses and even the National Convention itself. It is very likely that the judicial decisions on these cases will result in massive chaos, confusion and uncertainties. The fate of a party in this state with a few months to the elections is best left to the imagination, but it is not a fate we believe our millions of members should be abandoned to. There were parallel congresses in 24 states, namely: Abia, Adamawa, Bauchi, Bayelsa, Benue, Borno, Cross River, Delta, Enugu, Imo, Jigawa, Kaduna, Kano, Katsina, Kebbi, Kogi, Kwara, Lagos, Niger, Ondo, Oyo, Rivers, Sokoto and Zamfara.

    ”These congresses in wards, local government areas and states all over the federation produced different sets of delegates. We therefore had an unfortunate situation where the party has been seriously factionalised and divided in not just 24 states but the 36 states and Abuja FCT.”

    To Galadima, the National Convention, which was hailed by many as successful, was “even worse”. He said it was full of what he described as “constitutional infirmities”, adding that these were “so glaring and obvious that no fair minded person can claim that a legitimate and lawful executive emerged from that process”.

    He said the nominees should not have been declared elected as that violated the Constitution of the APC.

    ”Indeed, Article 20 of the APC Constitution is very clear and explicit. It envisages a situation where if at the close of nomination, only one person is nominated, the Convention must vote “Yes” or “No”, for each candidate before he is declared duly elected,” he said.

    ”We all witnessed on live television and at the venue, Eagles Square Abuja, that the Convention Chairman, only put the “Yes” question to all the delegates, using words to the effect: Do you affirm? Do you agree? There was no opportunity whatsoever given to the delegates to say whether they are voting “No” for any candidate as the “No” question was never put to them,” Galadima said.

    ”It may well be that it the convention Chairman put the “No” Question, the voice vote for the “Noes”, may have been more. We will never know, since it was never done, contrary to the express provisions of the APC Constitution. It is therefore unquestionably clear that the 18 officers of APC that was “Elected” through this process could not have been duly elected.”

    He spoke of “widespread disenchantment with the manner the party has been run, and the conduct and performance of our governments”, adding that the nPDP “made strenuous efforts to invite attention to inequities, injustice and poor management  in our party without any success”.  He said the group’s “good faith” was rewarded with “indifference and even contempt”.

    With scenario painted above, Galadima said the original founders of the party resolved to

    “take control and give legitimacy to APC to be now known as and called REFORMED-APC (R-APC).”

    He noted that: “The R-APC as constituted have officers in all the wards, 774 Local Governments, and all the 36 States of the Federation, including the FCT. The R-APC also have National Executive Committee, the National Working Committee and other organs of the Party are properly constituted and functional. Some of the National Officers of the R-APC  include:  Yobe State – Buba Galadima (National Chairman),  Kano State – Bala Muhd Gwagwarwa (National Deputy Chairman, North),  Abia State – Chief Theo Nkire (National Deputy Chairman, South East), Ondo State – Hon. Eko Olakunle (National Vice Chairman South West),  Kaduna State – Hon. Hussaini Dambo (National Vice Chairman North West), Kogi State – Mahmud Mohammed Abubakar – (National Vice Chairman, North Central), Benue State – Hon. Godwin Akaan (Deputy National Secretary),  Oyo State -Dr Fatai Atanda (National Secretary), Edo State – Kazeem Afegbua (National Publicity Secretary) and Adamawa State – Daniel Bwala (Financial Secretary).

    Others are:  Jigawa State – Abba Malami Taura (Deputy National Auditor),  Kwara  State – Hon. Kayode Omotosho (National Treasurer),  Anambra State -Barr. Nicholas Asuzu (National Youth Leader), Rivers State – Barr. Baride A. Gwezia (Legal Adviser), Katsina State – Haj Aisha Kaita (National Woman Leader), Bauchi State – Mrs. Fatima Adamu (National Welfare Secretary),  Ogun State -Alh. Isiak Akinwumi (Deputy Financial Secretary),  Zamfara State – Alh. Bashir Mai Mashi (Deputy National Treasurer),  Abuja – Hauwa Adam Mamuda (Deputy Welfare Secretary), Sokoto State – Hon. Shuaibu Gwanda Gobir (Deputy National Publicity Secretary),  Katsina State – M. T. Liman (National Organising Secretary) and  Niger State – Dr Theo Sheshi ( Deputy National Organising Secretary)

    Some of the State Chairmen include: Adamawa  – Dimas Ezra, Anambra – Sir Toby Chukwudi Okwuaya,  Bauchi – Sani Shehu,  Benue – Noah Mark Dickson, Jigawa – Hon. Nasiru Garba Dantiye, Kaduna – Col. Gora (Rtd),  Kano – Umar Haruna Doguwa,  Katsina – Sada Ilu,  Kogi – Alh. Hadi Ametuo,  Ogun – Alhaji Adeleke Adewale Taofeek,  Ondo –  Hon. Otetubi Idowu,  Oyo – Alh. Ali Alimi Isiaka Adisa, Yobe – Mohammed Burgo Dalah, Zamfara – Alh. Nasiru Yakubu, Niger – Hon. Samaila Yusuf Kontagora and FCT – Adaji Usman.

  • Why we picked Galadima for chair, by Baraje

    A leader of the new Peoples Democratic Party bloc, Alhaji Kawu Baraje, said the decision to pick Alhaji Buba Galadima as the National Chairman of the Reformed All Progressives Congress was because he is incorruptible.

    Baraje, who said Galadima’s sterling qualities and commitment to the Nigerian dream stood him out among his peers, lampooned the Federal Government’s fight against corruption.

    He noted that the new leader is capable of attracting the same electoral votes garnered by President Muhammadu Buhari in the North during the last election.

    He said: “Sometimes last week, I made a press release on the nPDP when a lot of you were making enquiries about where we were going, what was going to be our next step, are we still talking to the government or party APC? I dropped a hint that before the end of the first week of July, where we are will be made known to Nigerians and today you have now seen where we are.

    “Secondly, I was going through the papers today and one of the national dallies caught my attention, it said Senator Rabiu Kwankwaso had said bye to the APC. We just finished speaking with him and he is in support of Mr Chairman. He just finished with Kwankwoso, he was astonished that such a story can fly that is part of the antics the chairman is referring to.

    Rabiu Kwankwoso is very much with this group. We were together when the national officers’ names were being put together and we held final meetings on the address of today. So there is no cause for alarm.”

    Debunking allegations that the nPDP members were aggrieved over their inability to make personal financial gains from the government, Baraje said they were not satisfied with the failure of the party to operate within the realms of its electoral promises in line with the manifesto of the party.

    “We knew the content of the manifesto that APC was supposed to run and we stood for three years and came out when we waited for three years hoping for things to change and it never changed and we came out to say no.

    “And, before you know it, they even went deeper with the mischief today with the news items in the said national paper. This is the beginning of all mischiefs, this is the beginning of the real, reformed APC, this is the struggle for the emancipation of our country to stop the bloodletting, rejuvenate the economy of this country, to ensure there is three square meals on the table of the average Nigerian. This is what we stand for, strengthening the system and not the individual.

    Galadima described the change promised by the APC as a “fake change”, adding that the RAPC would bring real change in the 2019 elections under his authentic leadership.

    “We are saying that we are the authentic leaders if the APC, if anybody disputes that, let him go to court, we will meet him there. Do the  Senate President and the Speaker belong to any party? If they were members of any of the four parties (that formed the APC) you mentioned, it means they are part of this.

    “Lastly, on the question my leader avoided regarding what happened in Kwara State today, I will answer you, that it is only the beginning of what will happen in the country in the next few days.”

  • Kwankwaso’s defection to PDP a fallacy – nPDP

    The new Peoples Democratic Party (nPDP) bloc in the All Progressives Congress (APC) has described the purported defection of Senator Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso to the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) as fallacy and figment of the author’s imagination.

    The leader of the group, Alhaji Abubakar Baraje, stated this in his reaction to the purported defection of the former Kano State governor to PDP.

    Baraje said nPDP would soon adopt a new name, adding that the bloc remains intact.

    He maintained that the group would make public its position on the continued membership of APC on Thursday or Friday.

    He said Kwankwaso played active roles in the decisions of nPDP and would continue to play such roles as a key leader of the group.

    “We are all still in APC but the nPDP will come up with a lot of changes. nPDP is likely to change its name as a splinter group from APC,” he added.

     

     

  • Baraje, Oyinlola must apologise to Buhari, says ex-nPDP spokesman

    Ex-Publicity Secretary of the defunct New Peoples Democratic Party (nPDP)  has decried nPDP’s May 9 letter to the National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Chief John Odigie-Oyegun and its ultimatum to the Federal Government.

    Chukwuemeka Eze said nPDP’s ex-National Chairman Alhaji Kawu Baraje and former National Secretary Prince Olagunsoye Oyinlola should apologise to President Muhammadu Buhari and the Federal Government following its allegation of neglect.

    In an online statement yesterday, he distanced himself from the letter, and declared that the writers were not speaking for him and others since they had no knowledge of it.

    He said he issued a statement after consultations with other former nPDP members, insisting there must be a retraction within seven days.

    Eze said: “I have so much respect for Alhaji Baraje and Prince Oyinlola, but after going through their letter of May 9, 2018 to the National Chairman of APC, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, the need to straighten some of the facts raised in the letter becomes imperative, to douse the tension the letter has generated in the polity.

    “It is unfortunate Alhaji Baraje and Prince Oyinlola could send the letter without recourse to me or most of the stakeholders of the movement, considering our key roles in making the nPDP the beautiful bride it turned out to be and in bringing down the administration of Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, after teaming up with likeminds in the mega party, APC.

    “The letter has generated tension in the polity, that some sections of the media have concluded that it will lead to implosion of APC and probably the downfall of the administration of President Buhari, as well as the return of PDP to power.

    “The letter, though engineered by some key actors of nPDP looking for attention from President Buhari to negotiate for relevance during and after the 2019 general election, but using a body that has been dissolved in the bigger body of APC, is not in order and acceptable to some of us who risked our lives in projecting the ideals and vision of the body.”

  • PDP to Baraje group: come back to PDP

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) yesterday called on the disgruntled group in the All Progressives Congress (APC) to return to the PDP from where they defected to the APC in 2014.

    Reacting to the seven-day ultimatum the group gave President Muhammadu Buhari to address their grievances, spokesman of the PDP Kola Ologbondiyan, said: “They should return home; APC has nothing to offer them and the democratic setting that they left in PDP they can never find in APC.

    “APC is an amalgam, it is moving without its soul. It is demonstrated in three years that it can only kill our democracy, it cannot give it life. The democrats who left the Peoples Democratic Party and went to sojourn in APC should return back to their home.

    “The PDP is going to lead a coalition of every Nigerian who is sick and tired of hunger and the drift towards totalitariasm and autocracy”.

    The group is led by Alhaji Abubakar Kawu Baraje. Baraje is a long-standing political associate of SenatePresident Bukola Saraki.

  • Baraje: Buhari should take Obasanjo’s statement seriously

    Baraje: Buhari should take Obasanjo’s statement seriously

    A chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Kwara State, Alhaji Abubakar Kawu Baraje, spoke with reporters in Ilorin, the state capital, during his 67th birthday on partisan issues. ADEKUNLE JIMOH was there.

    How do you feel at 67?

    By the grace of God, I feel very strong, much younger than the figures of my age. Everything, I regard as the blessings of God. So, I feel very much more closer to God more than before because I feel strong, I feel healthy and I think I’m even sharper mentally than I was, so I’m always full of grace to God.

    What is your reaction to the formation of the Coalition for Nigeria Movement championed by Obasanjo?

    He called it Coalition for Nigeria Movement, and I think under the constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, everybody has a right to form any group, whether it is a political party or not talk-less of a person or somebody like President Obasanjo. It is not only a national figure; he is an international figure. I feel that he must have his own reasons why he put up the coalition.

    If he is the one who is putting it up, like people are claiming, he must have his own reasons; if it is the people themselves that come up, they have their reason why they came up, and I think it is like people are trying to chart a new political cause for Nigeria, and I always wish them well.

    One thing I believe personally is that there is no today without yesterday, and there can never be tomorrow without today. As much aa we wish so well for the new breed of politicians, they must tread very carefully so that they take examples from the immediate-past and avoid the mistakes of those ahead of them.

    Prior to the formation of the coalition, former President Obasanjo had written an open letter to President Muhammadu Buhair. Don’t you think the letter was written in bad faith?

    I don’t know what you mean by faith, but if you look at the trend of contribution by Chief Obasanjo to the polity  this is not the first time, this is not the second time; even he wrote those letters in the period of 1983 when Shehu Shagari was in power; he wrote such letters. I remember very vividly too, he wrote one to former President Goodluck Jonathan.

    So, if he is coming around with another letter, I think it is his own way of sending some signals to a government in power, negative or positive. If you ask my view about the letter as a politician and somebody who believes in Obasanjo, what happened during his own time is not what matters.

    When you are holding a lamp, you cannot see your immediate environment and that when other people are holding lamps, you see what they cannot see, and I think what Obasanjo has seen, both in the past and now, judging by events, some of the issues he has raised in such letters, have come to pass. So, if Obasanjo is writing that kind of letter, he must be taken serious. President Buhari should not take the words of sycophants or people, who think they just want to leverage by whatever criticisms they have into consideration.

    I mean President Buhari should look at the letter and call Obasanjo into a roundtable, and say look, what have you seen, you supported me before I got here, because I know very much Obasanjo gave him a lot of support, and he should call and discuss with him. That is politics; it is not about segregation. This country belongs to all of us. If anybody has anything to do to contribute to the progress and change, I think he should do. If I have an opportunity to write a letter, may be I will write one.

    People feel that young people should take over, that Buhari should not contest in 2019 as espoused by former President Obasanjo in his letter…

    Buhari has a right to contest. Only the electorate has a right to choose. Nobody can tell him not to contest, but the electorate has the right to choose, and I’m happy that the awareness is gaining ground very fast, more than what we think.

    When you look at the social media and the news generally, people are now preaching, we are not going to cause, we are not going to fight war, we are not going to use guns, we are not going to use cutlasses like before, we are using our voter card, and that is a weapon. So people can only answer that question by their own choice.

    I believe very sincerely, if Obasanjo himself or Babangida wants to come back, we can’t stop them by virtue of our constitution. I can’t tell Buhari’s health, he is the one that can tell. Even his doctors can only give advice. So, he has the right to say he wants to contest but for us as Nigerians, we must learn to choose.

    There are alleged moves to impeach the Senate President from the APC. What do you have to say?

    Many of us helped to build the APC. I’m one of them, Saraki was and still one of them. We are still building the party. I think the party has not made a statement about the so-called threat to impeach him. We only learnt from the news and from hearsays. And I think very sincerely, there must be ground before you impeach somebody like him, and the senators have their own rules and regulations and we all have constitutions that guide impeachment.

    If the Senate President is seen to have violated such rules, why not? But, sincerely as of today and to the best of my knowledge, I don’t think any Senate President in the past, in the immediate-past or long past, has held the Senate like Bukola Saraki has been holding it. He has been seeing to be a team player, he has been seeing to be leader that carries the Senate along and he has been seeing to be somebody, who can endure, give and sacrifice for this nation.

    Remember that he got to that position like a war, as if he was fighting a war. Today, even those people, who opposed him, are the most fanatical people, who are his supporters today. So, what reason do you want to say you have to want to impeach such a person.

    I’m aware there are lot of gimmicks, but the worst one that would boomerang against anybody who is planning anything, is to say they want to impeach Bukola Saraki. That Senate is solid as I have never seen. I believe it would keep bouncing. There are other ways that the gimmicks are going, let us all keep watching. We can only wish Nigeria well.

    But, I only hope and pray that Nigerians will not be destroyers of their hope. Bukola Saraki is young, that is what I mean by hope; he has age in his support; he is brilliant; he knows Nigeria; he has dream for Nigeria. If today, we now stand to say we want to destroy such people, then that is why I said I hope and pray that Nigeria will not destroy its own future.

    As 2019 elections are around the corner, what is your ambition and advice to aspirants for elective offices?

    We have a very solid system that other states are jealous and I have been enjoining my colleagues in Kwara State, whatever aspiration that they have, they should not destroy that system; we should follow that system. As far as we are concerned here in Kwara State, whenever you want to throw up anybody or people for elective positions, we have ways, we have tradition and such tradition is very peaceful and it metamorphoses into the solid result that keeps Kwara united, knitted and interwoven.

    We should not destroy that system by our ambition and by getting too excited that some of us have some wherewithal. Yesterday, those of us, who didn’t have the wherewithal and today we think we have the wherewithal, we should the wherewithal to better the lot of the masses and not to destroy the system. That is my appeal.

    Do you think people will vote for the APC in 2019?

    I’m aware that people are not comfortable. If I say I’m not aware, I’m being insincere. Disenchantment, I cannot tell. But when people are not comfortable, definitely, they look for alternatives. It is left for the APC as a party to accept that one; people are not comfortable.

    If APC accepts that people are not comfortable, then, they must look for solution, if they don’t look for solution, whatever result they get, will be there own responsibility.

    As to whether they would be in power or not, I have answered this question indirectly before; people are the ones that decide, who they would choose. APC is just barely four or five years old. If they think that there is a need for a change of political party, let them go to the ballot papers. There is no question about whether they would be in power or not.

    The PDP was here for 16 years. I was part of them. We had earlier forecast that time that we were going to be in power for 60 years but people decided and said, No. So, if people decide that the five years of APC are not comfortable, so be it. If they decide it is very fine, so be it. You and I cannot change it.

    You were in Benue State recently on a sympathy visit to Governor Samuel Ortom over the killings by suspected Fulani herdsmen. What prompted your visit?

    It is very unfortunate incident, because Fulani herdsmen have been with us for ages even before I was born, and I know by the history of this country, there are cattle routes, and both farmers and Fulani herdsmen have been living peacefully together, observing these routes.

    However, so many factors had caused a lot of dynamics such as population explosion, not only in Benue State but all over the country. So, the time I’m referring to now, may be population of Nigeria was under 50million. Today, we are almost 180 (million). So, all the lands that were mapped out as cattle routes, have to give way for people to exist. Talk of cattle routes now, is no longer feasible.

    Then, even where that is no longer feasible, we should not resort into carnage the way we have resorted to. However, there are two ways that I have seen the issue. Sometime in 2012 when PDP was in power, I  presented a view when this situation started in Plateau State. I presented a paper to the then executive council with my observation that this is beyond cattle men killing farmers. The kind of sophisticated weapon being used by these people was beyond the reach of an ordinary Fulani herdsman.

    Two, I also observed that the ways and methods these people used to kill people, maiming people first, cutting their heads, opening the stomachs of pregnant women, it is similar to that of Boko Haram, who later on said they have joined the ISIS; that is the pattern of killing of ISIS.

     

  • Baraje, NASFAT hail military for dislodging Boko Haram

    Former National Secretary of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Alhaji Abubakar Baraje has hailed the  Armed Forces for the conquest of Sambisa Forest.

    Baraje said the breakthrough over terror would have a desirable impact on the ailing economy, adding that the victory will bring about Nigeria’s economic recovery.

    Addressing reporters in Ilorin, the Kwara State capital, Baraje noted that it was cheering that the troops conquered the hideout believed to be the most dreadful dens of the outlawed sect.

    He added that the military, whose responsibility is to protect the country’s territorial integrity, had significantly restored peace.

    His words: “Our men in uniform, particularly the Army, have done us proud. Their major duty is to defend the territorial integrity of the country, and that is exactly what they have done on our behalf. They have brought peace to the land, and we can never thank them enough.

    “Even before today, they have been spending sleepless nights under harsh conditions and we appreciate them. We also believe this is beginning of many good things to come. In fact, this is the beginning of overcoming the recession.”

    The leadership of Nasrul-Lahi-L-Fatih Society (NASFAT) also praised the Army, who fought to demystify the invincibility of the insurgents in their once-dreaded stronghold.

    A statement by its President, Kameel Yomi Bolarinwa, said: “The fall of Sambisa forest in the hands of our soldiers inevitably signposts a great landmark in the fight against terrorism.

    “By this achievement, the Army has indisputably demonstrated to the world that it has the capacity to wipe terrorism from any part of the country, even with little or no external assistance.

    “Kudos must also be given to the President Muhammadu Buhari-led administration for boosting the morale of soldiers by providing the equipment and welfare, which assisted the Army to re-engineer its operations and strategies.

    “We urge the government to further work with the leadership of the Army to ensure that the war is effectively prosecuted till the end.”