Tag: Belgore

  • Belgore never stole any campaign fund, says Kwara PDP chief

    Belgore never stole any campaign fund, says Kwara PDP chief

    Kwara Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) chairman Akogun Iyiola Oyedepo has described as unfounded and malicious the claim that former governorship aspirant Mohamed Dele Belgore (SAN) and former minister Prof Abubakar Suleiman diverted the party’s 2015 campaign fund for their personal use.
    Speaking with reporters in Ilorin, the state capital, Oyedepo said Belgore, the Kwara coordinator for the reelection campaign of former President Goodluck Jonathan, and the minister only received the money on behalf of the party in their capacity as intermediaries.
    Oyedepo also said the claims of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), against Belgore and the minister were politically-motivated since the duo could not have asked the party the source of campaign fund given to them as campaign helmsmen in Kwara, especially when the president did a fundraising where he realised over N21b.
    According to the party chief, Belgore and Suleiman correctly declared and handed over the N450million they received for campaign at a stakeholders’ meeting in Ilorin attended by top party chieftains like Prof. Oba Abdulraheem; Hajiah Bola Shagaya; John Dara; PDP governorship campaign Senator Simeon Ajibola; former minister Bio Ibrahim; Mr Yinka Aluko;  and Senator Suleiman Ajadi.
    He said the money had been used for campaign logistics across all the senatorial districts of the state and that no individual diverted any money.
    His words: “The PDP had a presidential candidate who was president of this country. He was running for a second term and he worked with the party in this campaign. It is basic that anyone running for public office anywhere in this country will do fundraising. The president did a fundraising and he sent money to Kwara for the purpose of campaign,  just as he did to other states. This money was meant for campaign; we paid our agents who represented us at each of the polling units;  there was money for security;  there was money for transporting voters as may be necessary. This money was N450million for the entire Kwara.
    “I want to stress the point that Kwara actually got one of the least, if not the least, money for campaign in the entire country. Some have claimed that it was N500m.  There is nothing like that. It was N450m and the EFCC has confirmed this amount. This money was used for the purpose of campaign across Kwara’s 193 wards and thousands of polling units. This money was used to pay our agents and other election logistics. This money was never given to any single individual much less any individual embezzling it as some would have us believe.  There is no proof anywhere that any individual embezzled this money. We thank God that the investigators are doing their job.
    “We should note that inviting anyone to the EFCC doesn’t mean such person is guilty.  They only want to hear his side. And only those who were in charge of the campaign would be so invited. When this money came to Kwara, two individuals received it (from Abuja). Of course some persons must lead the effort since not all members of the party can take delivery of it. This is basic. You can’t possibly hand N450m to thousands of PDP members at the same time. So, some party representatives had to take it on behalf of the party. So only two persons collected the money on our behalf and they are Dele Belgore SAN (who was the coordinator for the presidential campaign) and the minister, Prof. Abubakar Suleiman. I did not say they collected the money and pocketed it. No, they didn’t.  When they collected the money, they then summoned a meeting of PDP stakeholders in Kwara. I was invited to where the money was submitted. Others like Bio Ibrahim,  Professor Abdulraheem Oba; Senator Simeon Ajibola;  John Dara; Ilyasu Ibrahim; Senator Ajadi; Mr Yinka Aluko; Ndakene;  Lawyer Kunle Sulaiman;  Hajia Bola Shagaya, among others, were called to this meeting where the duo of Belgore and the minister declared that the sums of N450m has been sent to Kwara PDP.

    “It was this same sum that the EFCC asked about. They neither overstated the amount nor under-declared it. So the two did not in anyway lie or corner any money for themselves. They not only declared the correct amount but they, following instructions from the party’s national headquarters, also gave a breakdown of how it was to be disbursed for the purpose of the election campaign. They also stated the debt already incurred before the money came. After the disbursement was done, we then disbursed the remainder for logistics across the polling units. Ilorin West got the largest share because it has the highest number of polling units in the state. You should note that in sharing the money, representatives/leaders of each of the senatorial districts were given control of money meant for their logistics.

    “So this, basically, was was how the money was shared. If the EFCC is now alleging that some individuals pocketed 450m and should return same, how would that be possible since these individuals never pocketed any such money? They did not embezzle any money  and asking them to refund any such money is unfair. Also, if the EFCC alleges that the 450m had been stolen, how can I, for instance,  know if it had been stolen? There is no way we can know that! If it had been stolen from any government agency, how would, say, my chairman in Isin or the one in Baruten could have known that? Or is it not normal for anyone running for public office to fund campaign or election day logistics? So I just laugh when anyone says somebody has stolen money. If they insist we stole,  are they saying we should have asked the president if he had stolen the money for his campaign? Especially when we knew he did fundraising where he raised over N21bn! That is a public record.  It is not our business if anyone had stolen or not. The appropriate thing is to pick up anyone alleged to have stolen. We did not steal. The truth of the matter is that this is a sheer attempt to cripple our party…. We are not against any corruption probe but to want to implicate us for collecting campaign fund is going too far.”

  • Kwara group alleges imposition of delegates

    •Another threatens mass defection

    Discordant tunes have trailed the last Saturday ward congress of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Kwara state.

    Dissatisfied with the result two groups named Kwara Democratic Assembly and Kwara Think Thank have alleged impunity and imposition of delegates.

    Leader of Kwara Think Thank, Adams Aliyu warned leadership of the PDP in the state against tampering with the results of congress or risks mass defection.

    The group said there were alleged “desperate nocturnal bid to tamper with the official results of the PDP ward congress across the state, particularly in Ilorin East, Ilorin West, Asa, Oke-ero and some other areas in the state.”

    He warned that any attempt to subvert the will of the electorates in the party will be sternly resisted.

    “Some leaders of the party in the state, apparently acting on the instructions of some Abuja-based politicians have been trying unsuccessfully to substitute the results of the congress from across the sixteen local government Areas of the state, particularly in Ilorin East, Ilorin West, Asa, Oke-ero and other parts of the state for obvious narrow interest.”

    “We urge the national leadership of our great party, the PDP, to immediately call these people to order before they all plunge the party into monumental crisis that may affect the fortunes of the party in the state.

    “The reason for our membership of the PDP is hinged on the promise of equity and fairness. There has been nothing, until now, that threatens our resolve on the PDP.”

    “If our concerns are not addressed as quickly as possibly by all concerned, we shall be left with no other option than to seek refuse in other places where our struggle for freedom from imposition and undemocratic tendencies will be protected an guaranteed.”

    Also in statement, President of Kwara Democratic Assembly, Comrade Kazeem Abiola “developments and reports across the state indicate a grand conspiracy to doctor the results of the ward congress held last Saturday in the state.

    “This impunity is in furtherance of widespread flagrant denial of due process and imposition of delegates under some dubious consensus arrangement. We owe it a duty to warn of an emerging grave danger with the fraudulent distortion and elimination by substitution of elected delegates from the 193 wards in Kwara state.

    This manipulation is being perpetrated under the watchful eyes of the executive members of the party at the PDP state secretariat from Saturday night when results were turned in.

    “This fraud, we are afraid, is capable of precipitating a crisis that may kill the chances of PDP in this state unless we resist it.

    “It is pertinent to warn that if we allow any alteration in the list of duly elected delegates, the PDP would be laying a strong foundation for crisis and a destructive implosion in Kwara state. This will be a bad omen for PDP and President Goodluck Jonathan ahead of the coming general elections.

    “Ward chairmen are advised to prevail on the PDP local government chairmen to defend the peoples’ verdict and insist on the genuine list of elected delegates from the various wards.

    “We also call on all lovers of PDP at the state and national level, the PDP National Working Committee and President Jonathan to intervene quickly and save Kwara PDP from the hands of those bent on pursuing mere self interest and pecuniary gains.”

     

    Belgore hails congress

    Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governorship aspirant in Kwara State, Mohammed Dele Belgore (SAN), has hailed the “peaceful and democratic” conduct of the Saturday ward congress in the state.

    Belgore also praised the Senator Iyiola Omisore committee, which supervised the election, for its maturity and transparency.

    The lawyer was the 2011 governorship candidate of the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN).

    He said: “This is to commend the peaceful and democratic conduct of the ward delegates election in Kwara State on Saturday.”

    In a statement by the governorship aspirant media aide, Rafiu Ajakaye said: “As could be seen by unbiased observers of the process, the conduct of the delegate elections satisfied the test of electoral integrity as every party member with requisite accreditation fully participated in the exercise without let or hindrance. I congratulate all members of our great party for this feat!

    “We commend the quality leadership of Senator Iyiola Omisore who led the committee of great party officials who conducted the exercise. The committee’s non-partisanship and maturity served to ensure a generally orderly and representative exercise.

    “Stakeholders and members of Kwara PDP family deserve a pat on the back for their patience and commitment which ensured that the delegates’ election was a huge success. This demonstrates our people’s thirst for positive change and people-driven governance in our state.”

  • I was misquoted on Ajaokuta firm, says Belgore

    I was misquoted on Ajaokuta firm, says Belgore

    Chairman of the Assets Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) Kola Belgore has denied a statement credited to him on the status of the Ajaokuta Steel Company in Kogi State.

    He was quoted as saying the government was wasting N3.4 billion monthly on the salary of 6,000 workers “who were doing nothing at Ajaokuta Steel Company”.

    The comment attracted criticisms from stakeholders in the steel sector, organised labour and the company’s management, among others.

    Belgore’s denial was contained in a four-page letter to the management of the company.

    In the letter, dated September 8 and addressed to the Sole Administrator of the company, Joseph Onobere, Belgore said: “I never said what was wrongly attributed to me by the media.”

    He admitted speaking at a luncheon in Ilorin, Kwara State, on the nation’s ailing economy, the steel sector and sundry issues, but said he did not give the figures credited to him.

    Belgore said: “I did not and will never disparage the company. As I do not work there, it is out of place for me to know and mention anything about the monthly wage bill, the number of machines installed and the number of workers in the company.

    “I reiterate that the press did not quote me correctly. I have always supported Ajaokuta Steel Company and will not say or do anything to bring it to disrepute or ridicule.”

    He urged the Federal Government and other stakeholders to resuscitate the company, saying it remains a catalyst to industrial development.

    The management of the company, in a statement yesterday, said the firm has 2,930 workers with a monthly wage bill of N288 million, “which is being paid to the workers directly by the Office of the accountant-general of the federation”.

    It said the government’s investment in the plant stands at N815 billion ($4.7 billion), adding: “The company has 185,000 tonnes of installed equipment; 226,000 tonnes of steel structures; 325,000 tonnes of pipes and insulators; 44,000 tonnes of refractory works; 1.9 million metre cube concrete works and 43 industrial plant units.”

    The management said reports of technical audit of the plants and equipment confirmed that they were in good condition and intact “due to the way and manner they have been preserved and maintained by the workers”.

  • Belgore: Yemi Afolayan’s death saddening

    Kwara State Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) chieftain Mr Mohammed Belgore has described the death of the All Progressives Congress (APC) General Secretary, Mr Yemi Afolayan, as “sad”.

    In a statement yesterday, Belgore said: “This is one death too many, given Afolayan’s relatively youthful age. Our differences over the course of our dear state, notwithstanding, his death is tragic and saddening.

    “I deeply commiserate with his immediate family, his political associates, particularly in the APC, and the Kwara State government, which is controlled by the party Afolayan served until his death. I pray to the Almighty to grant repose to his soul and comfort the family.”

  • How to tackle insecurity, by Belgore

    How to tackle insecurity, by Belgore

    Kwara State  Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) chieftain  Mohammed Dele Belgore (SAN) has reflected on the security situation, urging Nigerians to support government’s efforts.

    He said the Boko Haram insurgency is a national headache, which can only be cured through collective effort.

    Belgore called on federal and state governments  to collaborate in the fight against terror.

    The governorship aspirant spoke in Ilorin, the state capital, at the official inauguration of the Jonathan  Actualisation Movement. His keynote address was titled: ‘Security challenges, peace and sustainable development in Nigeria.’

    He said: “When there is collaboration, problems are better addressed and solved. A good example is the current struggle against the Ebola virus that has unfortunately been dumped on us.”

    He pointed out that the Boko Haram crisis cannot be resolved by the President or Federal Governments without the assistance of Nigerians.

    Belgore added: “The collaboration between the Lagos State and the Federal Government has helped tremendously to curb what would have been a major national calamity. There have been no finger pointing, personal insults or abuses of any kind. The two parties have worked closely together and are now winning the battle.

    “There is a big lesson for us all in this, as we combat the Boko Haram menace. That lesson is that, if we work together, we can overcome all the security challenges we currently have.”

    The legal luminary called on the government to also address the “main causes of insecurity,” which  include “youth idleness due to mass unemployment, lack of hope for a better tomorrow, religious fanaticism, desperation, ignorance, exploitation, misguidance, indiscipline, poor leadership and societal influence.”

    Belgore said: “Government must come off the thinking that giving N20,000-a-month-job to a few  youths would ebb their restiveness.

    “We have to provide our youths with gainful employment that will keep them away from all antisocial activities. Employing a few thousands youths and paying them a stipend like N20,000 per month is not it. There needs to be massive job creation to employ millions of people,” he added.

    “Both the federal and state governments need to work together on the creation of our own equivalent of the ‘Marshal Plan’ that was established in Europe after the second World War to put the millions of people back to work.”

    Belgore urged the government to bring  to bring perpetrators of crimes to book to reduce the culture of tcrime.

    He added: “We shouldn’t just be tough on Boko Haram and their likes, on cultism, kidnapping and urban violence, we should dig deep and be tough on the causes of such crimes. This is not to suggest that there is any valid justification for those crimes, but, we should critically examine societal problems that make young men and women easy preys to such crimes – issues of unemployment, falling moral standards, declining parental responsibility, and decaying educational system.

    “Addressing the crime without addressing their possible causes would merely be scratching the problem on the face. It would not make for a lasting solution.”

  • PVC: Kwara CNPP, INEC, Belgore trade blames

    PVC: Kwara CNPP, INEC, Belgore trade blames

    Political parties under the aegis of the Conference of Political Parties (CNPP) in Kwara State and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) are trading blames over the distribution and collection of permanent voter cards (PVCs) in the state.

    CNPP also attributed the disruption of the distribution of PVCs in Oke-Ogun ward of Ilorin South Local Government to a chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Mr. Dele Belgore (SAN).

    But INEC and Belgore said CNPP allegations are unfounded.

  • Belgore’s man is Kwara PDP chair

    A loyalist to the governorship candidate of the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), Mohammed Dele Belgore, Iyiola Oyedepo, has emerged the chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Kwara State.

    Returning Officer and former PDP National Chairman Senator Barnabas Gemade said Oyedepo polled 375 votes to defeat his closest rival, Bode Ojomu, who scored 255 votes.

    The senator was assisted by Mrs. Rita Ezeani, Mike Ahubuche and Nasiru Faruk from the PDP National Headquarters, Abuja.

    The former spokesperson of the PDP caretaker committee, Mariam Alhasan, came a distant third with 19 votes.

    The post of the Deputy Chairman went to Abdulkadir Manko Attahiru. Hassan Rasaq is the new Secretary.

    All the posts were keenly contested, except for the post of Vice Chairman (South) and Assistant Treasurer.

    The two posts were returned unopposed to Gbenle Adeyemi and Julius Ore. Bolaji Raji, Nma Mohammed and Abiola Moshood were elected as assistant secretaries for South, North and Central districts.

    Ms. Nimota Oba-Sulieman was elected Women Leader; Segun Olawoyin became youth leader while the post of Legal Adviser went to Musa Audu.

    The post of publicity secretary went to Rex Olawoye who polled 296 votes to floor his rival, Tajudeen Kareem. Babajide Stevens became the Financial Secretary.

    There was airtight security at the venues of the congress in Ilorin. Anti-riot and plain cloth policemen, with officials of the Civil Defence Corps were deployed in the venues. Delegates were thoroughly screened.

    Accreditation of delegates and voting took place at the Michael Imoudu Institute of Labour Studies (MILS) and Maryam Event Centre in Ilorin. Counting of the votes lasted throughout the night and spilled over to yesterday.

    Senator Gemade, addressing reporters at the end of the exercise, described the congress as very peaceful, orderly, free and fair.

    He said the delegates behaved well and conducted themselves in a manner that was acceptable to the team that supervised the congress.

    Gemade said the outcome of the congress portrayed the true picture of a winning party like the PDP, because what happened at the congress was a complete internal democracy.

    He said imposition of candidates which has made PDP to sensitive places like Kwara State will not happen again.

  • Belgore opposes renaming of Kwara Varsity after Saraki

    •Greets Muslims at Ramadan

    Opposition swelled yesterday against the proposed renaming of the Kwara State University (KWASU) after the strongman of the state’s politics, the late Dr Olusola Saraki.

    Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) chieftain, Mohammed Dele Belgore (SAN), dismissed the move as a “recipe for future chaos and disunity”.

    The senior lawyer also congratulated Muslims on the dawn of another Ramadan fasting, which begins today.

    He said: “As we thank the Almighty God for sparing our lives to witness another Ramadan, I enjoin all Kwarans to reflect on the lessons of sacrifice, self-denial and discipline during and after the holy month, because these qualities are required of all of us in our collective search for a truly prosperous Kwara and Nigeria.”

    Belgore was ACN governorship candidate in the 2011 election.

    In a statement by his media aide, Rafiu Ajakaye, the ACN chieftain noted that the decision to rename the public-owned KWASU after Saraki “heightens the widespread worry that Kwara State is being turned into a personal fiefdom”.

    The statement added: “Saraki was a political leader and, therefore, we should not politicise an academic institution. Moreso, his political leadership was a partisan one. He was not known to have made any significant contribution to education in the state. He was not known to have even enjoyed universal political acceptance throughout the length and breadth of the state. It is, therefore, wrong and indefensible to name an institution, which belongs to the entire people of the state, after such a figure. It is a dangerous precedent.

    “The Kwara State Government is best advised not to go ahead with it, as the decision risks being reversed in the same way that the President’s decision to rename the University of Lagos (UNILAG) as Moshood Abiola University was reversed, despite Abiola’s undisputed contributions to education – including his many educational endowments – nationwide.”

  • Belgore: A challenge to status quo

    Belgore: A challenge to status quo

    As the Kwara State Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) chieftain, Mr. Dele Belgore (SAN), celebrates his birthday today, ABDULLAHI ISHAQ examines his contributions as a legal giant and irrepressible progressive opposition leader.

     

    The unrelenting attacks on Mohammed Dele Belgore (SAN) are self-inflicted. They are to be expected. But anyone that is familiar with real politics should know that such unceasing attacks, authored by different faces of the political status quo in Kwara State, are never directed at a political featherweight. They signal the relevance of and the threat that Belgore poses to the ‘old order’ in the peculiar politics of the state.

    Whatever happens in 2015, he has made a point. For the first time in the history of post-election Kwara politics, the people of the state are now guaranteed alternative views from an opposition political figure on almost all policies of the government and issues affecting the public. Belgore, flag bearer for the opposition ACN in the 2011 governorship poll, had long been expected to disappear from the political scene, to reappear in 2014 or 2015 when the next election is just few months away.

    Having, therefore, proved the bookmakers wrong by sticking around, even after the Supreme Court judgment which upheld the election of PDPs Abdulfattah Ahmed, the political establishment rightly deems Mr Belgore a political risk, who must be checkmated.

    Clearly jittery about what the future holds, the pro status quo elite are not challenging MDB at the level of idea. They are not accusing him of lacking the intellectual content or constitutional right to govern Kwara State. Instead, they are appealing to pedestrian sentiments and scaremongering. Indeed, they once dismissed the opposition as nonexistent, then they graduated to saying the opposition should be constructive and alleging that opposition was behind the rage that greeted the perennial nonpayment of workers salary and the minimum wage. All of it is understandable, placed against the fact that the political establishment had never been used to consistent opposition, which insists that things must be done the right way and stays the course.

    But the establishment politicians are honing their attack skills. Hiding under numerous names, they are accusing Belgore of dumping his support base after the election and waiting till election time to identify with the people. That was a misfire, a terrible one that questions their credentials.

    Since Belgore’s voice is heard again and again on Kwara (and national matters) as they affect the masses, whose collective wealth and investments, made with their funds, are daily being converted to private estate, it is safe to interpret these fellows’ understanding of ‘identify with the people’ to mean a call on Belgore to descend to their level of bread-and-butter politics, which makes even pundits loyal to them, to aver that the state politics is shaped by poverty. If Kwara politics has not shed the toga of it being shaped by poverty, for which it is known some decades ago, does it not say something worrisome about the much-glorified political establishment? If that is not enough reason to do away with such political machinery, then every Nigerian state is invited to adopt Kwara as their development model.

    Now, here is the issue: Belgore should never be stampeded into compromising his personal principle of respecting the poor by keeping to his chest, as much as practicable, whatever gestures made in community development.

    Perhaps, except the government which has a responsibility to account for how every penny of public fund is spent, individuals reserve the right to keep to themselves whatever personal goodwill they have extended to the less privileged. I am aware that the most rewarding gift is that given in secret. We are told that the right-hand should give without the left-hand knowing. And as Belgore himself has repeatedly stated in the past, it is never a good thing to humiliate fellow human beings by publicising their names/status in the name of offering them aids. This in fact conflicts with our moral belief. Besides, whatever anyone gives to the next persons ought to be from the conviction that the recipients deserve it – and not to give the impression of politically-motivated philanthropy. Indeed, the education support (extramural classes) Belgore gave last year became a public issue (as far as I can tell), only when the government was playing politics with it. We neither heard him nor his media office announcing it in the media. I was to learn later that the lawyer, well before the 2011 poll, gave scholarship every year to at least five law students, among other gestures, I’m told, he does in his own way. But we don’t hear of these in the media. It is his own style. Whoever wishes to announce his philanthropic gestures is absolutely free to do so, but it will be unfair to expect everybody to join the indecent charade of exhibiting/mocking the helplessness of our people by showing on TV or sponsoring some newspaper articles containing scenes of where ankara/garri/UTME forms are being shared to the ‘poor’ and to students deliberately, not exposed to qualitative primary/secondary education to give them solid beginning.

    Maybe I should say here that this article is provoked partly by a recent article in THISDAY entitled Ilorin Elite and the Sarakis, authored by one Arowolo. The writer undid himself through and through. And in trying to clad the Sarakis as the messiah of Kwara people, he did much to indict them. Having been in government and calling the shots for decades, a genuine pro-people effort would have been to push for an institutionalised social security net for the people – one that would make such pro-people gesture a matter of right for the recipient and not something designed to keep them perpetually loyal to any individual political dynasty. That’s what has been done in the United States that Arowolo referenced. No American recipient of that gesture is duty bound to belong to the GOP or the Democratic Party! And quite interestingly, we have seen the social security system now gradually being institutionalised in Osun and Ekiti whose governors, being ACN chieftains, are Belgore’s associates. In these two states today, once you are aged 60 and above, you are entitled to some naira at month’s end. You need not belong to ACN/Aregbesola/Fayemi’s camp to get it. That’s the sort of empowerment that is without any ‘string attached.’

    Also, Arowolo failed to tell the public that the sort of philanthropy he laboured so much to compare with the US social security system is in fact unacceptable in that society. That society, not only rejects individuals not known with legally-identifiable sources of income, it in fact, does not reckon with politicians with no personal record of professional/trade excellence. They celebrate individuals who can inspire the young generations to attain dignified success!

    It is questionable that Arowolo does not see anything wrong in repeating the innuendo that the Kwara State politics is defined by poverty and cronyism. If somebody had been privileged to remain in power for four decades, as Arowolo rightly said of the Sarakis, is it not self-indicting that the same Ilorin people still don’t have access to good water more than 30 years after personal fund was used to distribute water? The Ilorin Water Reticulation Project, which we understand has now gulped over N4b, has not resulted in a drop of water. Instead the government said it is still digging boreholes (in 21st century) to address the water problem.

    Also, it is in the interest of the sarakites not to launch a debate comparing Senator Bukola Saraki to Belgore. Occasionally, I see them touting on the social media the former’s divine right to lead Kwara the same way Thomas Hobbes regaled the British society with the ‘divine right’ of the King to, not only rule over them, but to dictate what religion they practice. To be sure, both men (Saraki and Belgore) are miles apart if leadership should be judged by personal discipline, integrity and professional excellence. And in the years to come, the good people of Kwara, not least the youth, would need to decide who leads them politically, keeping in mind what grave implications such decision has for their future and the future of the generations yet to be born.

    One final thing: Belgore is a year older today. He was born on June 25, 1961, and, according to records accessible online, he was educated in Capital School (Kaduna); Offa Grammar School, Offa; and University of Hull, London where he read law. He has a Masters Degree in Law from the University of Bristol, England. At 28, in 1989, he co-founded what is today one of Nigeria’s leading law firms Sofunde, Osakwe, Ogundipe and Belgore (SOOB). At 40, in 2001, Belgore became a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, one of the youngest holders of the title.

    His detractors are genuinely worried that his voice has refused to go away since the April poll. They had thought he would fizzle out after the Supreme Court ruling. By not keeping quiet on Kwara matters, Belgore has kept faith with his pledge to keep the flag of the struggle flying. HBD MDB!

     

    • Ishaq wrote from Ilorin, Kwara State.

     

  • Belgore blames NGF division on Presidency

    Belgore blames NGF division on Presidency

    A chieftain of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) in Kwara State, Mr Mohammed Dele Belgore (SAN), has blamed the Presidency for interfering in the affairs of the Nigerian Governors’ Forum (NGF).

    Belgore addressed reporters in Ilorin, the state capital, at the sideline of a dinner organised for the former Vice Chancellor of the University of Ilorin (UNILORIN), Prof Ishaq Oloyede.

    The 2011 governorship candidate of the ACN said: “It is the interference and meddlesomeness of the Presidency that has led to this crisis. I think the Presidency, and nobody else, should be blamed for what has happened.

    “The factionalisation of the NGF is disgraceful. It is needless. The NGF is a body that could conduct its affairs. It is the governors’ forum, not a forum for the governors of the President. So, the forum should have been left alone without interference to determine who its chairman should be.”

    The senior lawyer hailed the action of Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola (SAN) for seeking a legal solution to the imbroglio.

    He said: “That is what the courts are for. I commend anybody who takes its cause to the court. The problem is that people take the law into their hands. Some people abuse their positions.

    “But when someone has a grievance and takes it to the court, he submits it to the lawful authority and sets an example for orderliness in the society. So, I commend Governor Fashola’s action.”

    On this year’s local government election in the state, Belgore said: “We have not been given a date for the election, but as a political party, we always prepare. Our preparation will not take long time because we have always had the people on our side. So, we do not need any prolonged period of time. What we need is a level-playing field..”